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California Civil Code -- Davis - Stirling Act
§1350 This title shall be known and may be cited
as the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development
Act.
§1350
.5
Division, part, title, chapter, and section headings do not in any manner
affect the scope, meaning, or intent of this title.
§1350
.7
(a) This section applies to delivery of a document to the extent the section
is made applicable by another provision of this title.
(b) A document shall be
delivered by one or more of the following methods:
(1) Personal
delivery.
(2) First-class mail,
postage prepaid, addressed to a member at the address last shown on the books of the association or otherwise
provided by the member. Delivery is deemed to be complete on
deposit into the United States mail.
(3) E-mail, facsimile, or
other electronic means, if the recipient has agreed to that method of delivery. If a document is delivered by electronic means, delivery is complete at the
time of transmission.
(4) By publication in a
periodical that is circulated primarily to members of the association.
(5) If the association
broadcasts television programming for the purpose of distributing information on association business to its
members, by inclusion in the programming.
(6) A method of delivery
provided in a recorded provision of the governing documents.
(7) Any other method of
delivery, provided that the recipient has agreed to that method of delivery.
(c) A document may be
included in or delivered with a billing statement, newsletter, or other document that is delivered by one of the
methods provided in subdivision (b).
(d) For the purposes of this
section, an unrecorded provision of the governing documents providing for a particular method of delivery does
not constitute agreement by a member of the association to that method of delivery.
§1351
As used in this title, the following terms have the following
meanings:
(a) "Association" means a
nonprofit corporation or unincorporated association created for the purpose of managing a common interest
development.
(b) "Common area" means the
entire common interest development except the separate interests therein. The estate in the common area may be a fee, a life estate, an estate for
years, or any combination of the foregoing. However, the common
area for a planned development specified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (k) may consist of mutual or reciprocal
easement rights appurtenant to the separate interests.
(c) "Common interest
development" means any of the following:
(1) A community apartment
project.
(2) A condominium
project.
(3) A planned
development.
(4) A stock
cooperative.
(d) "Community apartment
project" means a development in which an undivided interest in land is coupled with the right of exclusive
occupancy of any apartment located thereon.
(e) "Condominium plan" means
a plan consisting of (1) a description or survey map of a condominium project, which shall refer to or show
monumentation on the ground, (2) a three-dimensional description of a condominium project, one or more
dimensions of which may extend for an indefinite distance upwards or downwards, in sufficient detail to identify
the common areas and each separate interest, and (3) a certificate consenting to the recordation of the
condominium plan pursuant to this title signed and acknowledged by the following:
(A) The record owner of fee
title to that property included in the condominium project.
(B) In the case of a
condominium project which will terminate upon the termination of an estate for years, the certificate shall be
signed and acknowledged by all lessors and lessees of the estate for years.
(C) In the case of a
condominium project subject to a life estate, the certificate shall be signed and acknowledged by all life
tenants and remainder interests.
(D) The certificate shall
also be signed and acknowledged by either the trustee or the beneficiary of each recorded deed of trust, and the
mortgagee of each recorded mortgage encumbering the property.
Owners of mineral rights, easements, rights-of-way, and other
nonpossessory interests do not need to sign the condominium plan.
Further, in the event a conversion to condominiums of a community apartment project or stock cooperative has
been approved by the required number of owners, trustees, beneficiaries, and mortgagees pursuant to Section
66452.10 of the Government Code, the
certificate need only be signed by those owners, trustees, beneficiaries, and mortgagees approving the
conversion.
A condominium plan may be amended or revoked by a subsequently
acknowledged recorded instrument executed by all the persons whose signatures would be required pursuant to this
subdivision.
(f) A "condominium project"
means a development consisting of condominiums. A condominium
consists of an undivided interest in common in a portion of real property coupled with a separate interest in
space called a unit, the boundaries of which are described on a recorded final map, parcel map, or condominium
plan in sufficient detail to locate all boundaries thereof. The
area within these boundaries may be filled with air, earth, or water, or any combination thereof, and need not
be physically attached to land except by easements for access and, if necessary, support. The description of the unit may refer to (1) boundaries described in the
recorded final map, parcel map, or condominium plan, (2) physical boundaries, either in existence, or to be
constructed, such as walls, floors, and ceilings of a structure or any portion thereof, (3) an entire structure
containing one or more units, or (4) any combination thereof. The
portion or portions of the real property held in undivided interest may be all of the real property, except for
the separate interests, or may include a particular three-dimensional portion thereof, the boundaries of which
are described on a recorded final map, parcel map, or condominium plan. The area within these boundaries may be filled with air, earth, or water, or
any combination thereof, and need not be physically attached to land except by easements for access and, if
necessary, support. An individual condominium within a condominium
project may include, in addition, a separate interest in other portions of the real property.
(g) "Declarant" means the
person or group of persons designated in the declaration as declarant, or if no declarant is designated, the
person or group of persons who sign the original declaration or who succeed to special rights, preferences, or
privileges designated in the declaration as belonging to the signator of the original
declaration.
(h) "Declaration" means the
document, however denominated, which contains the information required by Section 1353.
(i) "Exclusive use common
area" means a portion of the common areas designated by the declaration for the exclusive use of one or more,
but fewer than all, of the owners of the separate interests and which is or will be appurtenant to the separate
interest or interests.
(1) Unless the declaration
otherwise provides, any shutters, awnings, window boxes, doorsteps, stoops, porches, balconies, patios, exterior
doors, doorframes, and hardware incident thereto, screens and windows or other fixtures designed to serve a
single separate interest, but located outside the boundaries of the separate interest, are exclusive use common
areas allocated exclusively to that separate interest.
(2) Notwithstanding the
provisions of the declaration, internal and external telephone wiring designed to serve a single separate
interest, but located outside the boundaries of the separate interest, are exclusive use common areas allocated
exclusively to that separate interest.
(j) "Governing documents"
means the declaration and any other documents, such as bylaws, operating rules of the association, articles of
incorporation, or articles of association, which govern the operation of the common interest development or
association.
(k) "Planned development"
means a development (other than a community apartment project, a condominium project, or a stock cooperative)
having either or both of the following features:
(1) The common area is owned either by an association or in
common by the owners of the separate interests who possess appurtenant rights to the beneficial use and
enjoyment of the common area.
(2) A power exists in the
association to enforce an obligation of an owner of a separate interest with respect to the beneficial use and
enjoyment of the common area by means of an assessment which may become a lien upon the separate interests in
accordance with Section 1367 or 1367.1.
(l) "Separate interest" has
the following meanings:
(1) In a community apartment
project, "separate interest" means the exclusive right to occupy an apartment, as specified in subdivision
(d).
(2) In a condominium
project, "separate interest" means an individual unit, as specified in subdivision (f).
(3) In a planned
development, "separate interest" means a separately owned lot, parcel, area, or space.
(4) In a stock cooperative,
"separate interest" means the exclusive right to occupy a portion of the real property, as specified in
subdivision (m).
Unless the declaration or condominium plan, if any exists, otherwise
provides, if walls, floors, or ceilings are designated as boundaries of a separate interest, the interior
surfaces of the perimeter walls, floors, ceilings, windows, doors, and outlets located within the separate
interest are part of the separate interest and any other portions of the walls, floors, or ceilings are part of
the common areas.
The estate in a separate interest may be a fee, a life estate, an estate
for years, or any combination of the foregoing.
(m) "Stock cooperative"
means a development in which a corporation is formed or availed of, primarily for the purpose of holding title
to, either in fee simple or for a term of years, improved real property, and all or substantially all of the
shareholders of the corporation receive a right of exclusive occupancy in a portion of the real property, title
to which is held by the corporation. The owners' interest in the
corporation, whether evidenced by a share of stock, a certificate of membership, or otherwise, shall be deemed
to be an interest in a common interest development and a real estate development for purposes of subdivision (f)
of Section 25100 of the Corporations Code.
A "stock cooperative" includes a limited equity housing cooperative
which is a stock cooperative that meets the criteria of Section 33007.5 of the Health and Safety
Code.
§1352 This title
applies and a common interest development is created whenever a separate interest coupled with an interest in
the common area or membership in the association is, or has been, conveyed, provided, all of the following are
recorded:
(a) A
declaration.
(b) A condominium plan, if
any exists.
(c) A final map or parcel map, if Division 2 (commencing with Section 66410)
of Title 7 of the Government Code
requires the recording of either a final map or parcel map for the common interest development.
§1352.5 (a) No declaration or other governing document shall include a restrictive
covenant in violation of Section 12955 of the Government Code
.
(b) Notwithstanding any
other provision of law or provision of the governing documents, the board of directors of an association,
without approval of the owners, shall amend any declaration or other governing document that includes a
restrictive covenant prohibited by this section to delete the restrictive covenant, and shall restate the
declaration or other governing document without the restrictive covenant but with no other change to the
declaration or governing document.
(c) If after providing
written notice to an association requesting that the association delete a restrictive covenant that violates
subdivision (a), and the association fails to delete the restrictive covenant within 30 days of receiving the
notice, the Department of Fair Employment and Housing, a city or county in which a common interest development
is located, or any person may bring an action against the association for injunctive relief to enforce
subdivision (a). The court may award attorney's fees to the
prevailing party.
§1353 (a)(1) A
declaration, recorded on or after January 1, 1986, shall contain a legal description of the common interest
development, and a statement that the common interest development is a community apartment project, condominium
project, planned development, stock cooperative, or combination thereof. The declaration shall additionally set forth the name of the association and
the restrictions on the use or enjoyment of any portion of the common interest development that are intended to
be enforceable equitable servitudes. If the property is located
within an airport influence area, a declaration, recorded after January 1, 2004, shall contain the following
statement:
NOTICE OF AIRPORT IN VICINITY
This property is presently located in the vicinity of an
airport, within what is known as an airport influence area. For
that reason, the property may be subject to some of the annoyances or inconveniences associated with proximity
to airport operations (for example: noise, vibration, or odors). Individual sensitivities to those annoyances can vary from person to
person. You may wish to consider what airport annoyances, if any,
are associated with the property before you complete your purchase and determine whether they are acceptable to
you.
(2) For purposes of this
section, an "airport influence area," also known as an "airport referral area," is the area in which current or
future airport-related noise, overflight, safety, or airspace protection factors may significantly affect land
uses or necessitate restrictions on those uses as determined by an airport land use commission.
(3) If the property is
within the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission jurisdiction, as described in Section 66610
of the Government Code, a
declaration recorded on or after January 1, 2006, shall contain the following notice:
NOTICE OF SAN FRANCISCO BAY CONSERVATION AND DEVELOPMENT
COMMISSION JURISDICTION
This property is located within the jurisdiction of the San
Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Use and
development of property within the commission's jurisdiction may be subject to special regulations,
restrictions, and permit requirements. You may wish to investigate and determine whether they are acceptable to
you and your intended use of the property before you complete your transaction.
(4) The statement in a
declaration acknowledging that a property is located in an airport influence area or within the jurisdiction of
the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission does not constitute a title defect, lien, or
encumbrance.
(b) The declaration may
contain any other matters the original signator of the declaration or the owners consider
appropriate.
§1353.5 (a) Except as
required for the protection of the public health or safety, no declaration or other governing document shall
limit or prohibit, or be construed to limit or prohibit, the display of the flag of the United States by an
owner on or in the owner's separate interest or within the owner's exclusive use common area, as defined in
Section 1351.
(b) For purposes of this
section, "display of the flag of the United States" means a flag of the United States made of fabric, cloth, or
paper displayed from a staff or pole or in a window, and does not mean a depiction or emblem of the flag of the
United States made of lights, paint, roofing, siding, paving materials, flora, or balloons, or any other similar
building, landscaping, or decorative component.
(c) In any action to enforce
this section, the prevailing party shall be awarded reasonable attorneys' fees and costs.
§1353.6 (a) The
governing documents, including the operating rules, may not prohibit posting or displaying of noncommercial
signs, posters, flags, or banners on or in an owner's separate interest, except as required for the protection
of public health or safety or if the posting or display would violate a local, state, or federal
law.
(b) For purposes of this section, a noncommercial sign, poster, flag, or
banner may be made of paper, cardboard, cloth, plastic, or fabric, and may be posted or displayed from the yard,
window, door, balcony, or outside wall of the separate interest, but may not be made of lights, roofing, siding,
paving materials, flora, or balloons, or any other similar building, landscaping, or decorative component, or
include the painting of architectural surfaces.
(c) An association may prohibit noncommercial signs and
posters that are more than 9 square feet in size and noncommercial flags or banners that are more than 15
square feet in size.
§1353.7 (a) No common
interest development may require a homeowner to install or repair a roof in a manner that is in violation of
Section 13132.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
(b) Governing documents of a
common interest development located within a very high fire severity zone, as designated by the Director of
Forestry and Fire Protection pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section 4201) of Chapter 1 of Part 2 of
Division 4 of the Public Resources Code or by
a local agency pursuant to Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 51175) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the
Government Code, shall
allow for at least one type of fire retardant roof covering material that meets the requirements of Section
13132.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
§1353.8 The architectural guidelines of a common interest
development shall not prohibit or include conditions that have the effect of prohibiting the use of low
water-using plants as a group.
§1354
(a) The covenants and restrictions in the declaration shall be enforceable
equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable, and shall inure to the benefit of and bind all owners of separate
interests in the development. Unless the declaration states
otherwise, these servitudes may be enforced by any owner of a separate interest or by the association, or by
both.
(b) A governing document
other than the declaration may be enforced by the association against an owner of a separate interest or by an
owner of a separate interest against the association.
(c) In an action to enforce
the governing documents, the prevailing party shall be awarded reasonable attorney's fees and
costs.
§1355
(a) The declaration may be amended pursuant to the governing documents or
this title. Except as provided in Section 1356, an amendment is
effective after (1) the approval of the percentage of owners required by the governing documents has been given,
(2) that fact has been certified in a writing executed and acknowledged by the officer designated in the
declaration or by the association for that purpose, or if no one is designated, by the president of the
association, and (3) that writing has been recorded in each county in which a portion of the common interest
development is located.
(b) Except to the extent
that a declaration provides by its express terms that it is not amendable, in whole or in part, a declaration
which fails to include provisions permitting its amendment at all times during its existence may be amended at
any time. For purposes of this subdivision, an amendment is only
effective after (1) the proposed amendment has been distributed to all of the owners of separate interests in
the common interest development by first-class mail postage prepaid or personal delivery not less than 15 days
and not more than 60 days prior to any approval being solicited; (2) the approval of owners representing more
than 50 percent, or any higher percentage required by the declaration for the approval of an amendment to the
declaration, of the separate interests in the common interest development has been given, and that fact has been
certified in a writing, executed and acknowledged by an officer of the association; and (3) the amendment has
been recorded in each county in which a portion of the common interest development is located. A copy of any amendment adopted pursuant to this subdivision shall be
distributed by first-class mail postage prepaid or personal delivery to all of the owners of separate interest
immediately upon its recordation.
§1355
.5
(a) Notwithstanding any provision of the governing documents of a common
interest development to the contrary, the board of directors of the association may, after the developer of the
common interest development has completed construction of the development, has terminated construction
activities, and has terminated his or her marketing activities for the sale, lease, or
other
disposition of separate interests within the development, adopt an amendment deleting from any of the governing
documents any provision which is unequivocally designed and intended, or which by its nature can only have been
designed or intended, to facilitate the developer in completing the construction or marketing of the
development. However, provisions of the governing documents
relative to a particular construction or marketing phase of the development may not be deleted under the
authorization of this subdivision until that construction or marketing phase has been
completed.
(b) The provisions which may
be deleted by action of the board shall be limited to those which provide for access by the developer over or
across the common area for the purposes of (a) completion of construction of the development, and (b) the
erection, construction, or maintenance of structures or other facilities designed to facilitate the completion
of construction or marketing of separate interests.
(c) At least 30 days prior
to taking action pursuant to subdivision (a), the board of directors of the association shall mail to all owners
of the separate interests, by first-class mail, (1) a copy of all amendments to the governing documents proposed
to be adopted under subdivision (a) and (2) a notice of the time, date, and place the board of directors will
consider adoption of the amendments. The board of directors of an
association may consider adoption of amendments to the governing documents pursuant to subdivision (a) only at a
meeting which is open to all owners of the separate interests in the common interest development, who shall be
given opportunity to make comments thereon. All deliberations of
the board of directors on any action proposed under subdivision (a) shall only be conducted in such an open
meeting.
(d) The board of directors
of the association may not amend the governing documents pursuant to this section without the approval of the
owners, casting a majority of the votes at a meeting or election of the association constituting a quorum and
conducted in accordance with Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 7510) of Part 3 of Division 2 of Title 1 of, and
Section 7613 of, the Corporations Code. For the purposes of this section, "quorum" means more than 50 percent of the
owners who own no more than two separate interests in the development.
§1356
(a) If in order to amend a declaration, the declaration requires owners
having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association, in a single class voting structure, or owners
having more than 50 percent of the votes in more than one class in a voting structure with more than one class,
to vote in favor of the amendment, the association, or any owner of a separate interest, may petition the
superior court of the county in which the common interest development is located for an order reducing the
percentage of the affirmative votes necessary for such an amendment. The petition shall describe the effort that has been made to solicit approval
of the association members in the manner provided in the declaration, the number of affirmative and negative
votes actually received, the number or percentage of affirmative votes required to effect the amendment in
accordance with the existing declaration, and other matters the petitioner considers relevant to the court's
determination. The petition shall also contain, as exhibits
thereto, copies of all of the following:
(1) The governing
documents.
(2) A complete text
of the amendment.
(3) Copies of any notice and
solicitation materials utilized in the solicitation of owner approvals.
(4) A short explanation of
the reason for the amendment.
(5) Any other documentation
relevant to the court's determination.
(b) Upon filing the
petition, the court shall set the matter for hearing and issue an
ex parte order setting forth the manner in which notice shall be given.
(c) The court may, but shall
not be required to, grant the petition if it finds all of the following:
(1) The petitioner has given
not less than 15 days written notice of the court hearing to all members of the association, to any mortgagee of
a mortgage or beneficiary of a deed of trust who is entitled to notice under the terms of the declaration, and
to the city, county, or city and county in which the common interest development is located that is entitled to
notice under the terms of the declaration.
(2) Balloting on the
proposed amendment was conducted in accordance with all applicable provisions of the governing
documents.
(3) A reasonably diligent
effort was made to permit all eligible members to vote on the proposed amendment.
(4) Owners having more than
50 percent of the votes, in a single class voting structure, voted in favor of the amendment. In a voting structure with more than one class, where the declaration requires
a majority of more than one class to vote in favor of the amendment, owners having more than 50 percent of the
votes of each class required by the declaration to vote in favor of the amendment voted in favor of the
amendment.
(5) The amendment is
reasonable.
(6) Granting the petition is
not improper for any reason stated in subdivision (e).
(d) If the court makes the
findings required by subdivision (c), any order issued pursuant to this section may confirm the amendment as
being validly approved on the basis of the affirmative votes actually received during the balloting period or
the order may dispense with any requirement relating to quorums or to the number or percentage of votes needed
for approval of the amendment that would otherwise exist under the governing documents.
(e) Subdivisions (a) to (d),
inclusive, notwithstanding, the court shall not be empowered by this section to approve any amendment to the
declaration that:
(1) Would change provisions
in the declaration requiring the approval of owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in more than one
class to vote in favor of an amendment, unless owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in each affected
class approved the amendment.
(2) Would eliminate any
special rights, preferences, or privileges designated in the declaration as belonging to the declarant, without
the consent of the declarant.
(3) Would impair the
security interest of a mortgagee of a mortgage or the beneficiary of a deed of trust without the approval of the
percentage of the mortgagees and beneficiaries specified in the declaration, if the declaration requires the
approval of a specified percentage of the mortgagees and beneficiaries.
(f) An amendment is not
effective pursuant to this section until the court order and amendment have been recorded in every county in
which a portion of the common interest development is located. The
amendment may be acknowledged by, and the court order and amendment may be recorded by, any person designated in
the declaration or by the association for that purpose, or if no one is designated for that purpose, by the
president of the association. Upon recordation of the amendment and court order, the declaration, as amended in
accordance with this section, shall have the same force and effect as if the amendment were adopted in
compliance with every requirement imposed by the governing documents.
(g) Within a reasonable time
after the amendment is recorded the association shall mail a copy of the amendment to each member of the
association, together with a statement that the amendment has been recorded.
§1357
(a) The Legislature finds that there are common interest developments that
have been created with deed restrictions which do not provide a means for the property owners to extend the term
of the declaration. The Legislature further finds that covenants
and restrictions, contained in the declaration, are an appropriate method for protecting the common plan of
developments and to provide for a mechanism for financial support for the upkeep of common areas including, but
not limited to, roofs, roads, heating systems, and recreational facilities. If declarations terminate prematurely, common interest developments may
deteriorate and the housing supply of affordable units could be impacted adversely.
The Legislature further finds and declares that it is in the public
interest to provide a vehicle for extending the term of the
declaration if owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in
the association choose to do so.
(b) A declaration which
specifies a termination date, but which contains no provision for extension of the termination date, may be
extended by the approval of owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association or any greater
percentage specified in the declaration for an amendment thereto.
If the approval of owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association is required to amend the
declaration, the term of the declaration may be extended in accordance with Section 1356.
(c) Any amendment to a
declaration made in accordance with subdivision (b) shall become effective upon recordation in accordance with Section 1355.
(d) No single extension of
the terms of the declaration made pursuant to this section shall exceed the initial term of the declaration or
20 years, whichever is less. However, more than one extension may
occur pursuant to this section.
§1357
.100
As used in this
article:
(a) "Operating rule" means a
regulation adopted by the board of directors of the association that applies generally to the management and
operation of the common interest development or the conduct of the business and affairs of the
association.
(b) "Rule change" means the
adoption, amendment, or repeal of an operating rule by the board of directors of the
association.
§1357.
110
An operating rule is valid and enforceable only if all of the following
requirements are satisfied:
(a) The rule is in
writing.
(b) The rule is within the
authority of the board of directors of the association conferred by law or by the declaration, articles of
incorporation or association, or bylaws of the association.
(c) The rule is not
inconsistent with governing law and the declaration, articles of incorporation or association, and bylaws of the
association.
(d) The rule is adopted,
amended, or repealed in good faith and in substantial compliance with the requirements of this
article.
(e) The rule is
reasonable.
§1357
.120
(a) Sections 1357.130 and
1357.140 only apply to an operating rule that relates to one or
more of the following subjects:
(1) Use of the common area
or of an exclusive use common area.
(2) Use of a separate
interest, including any aesthetic or architectural standards that govern alteration of a separate
interest.
(3) Member discipline,
including any schedule of monetary penalties for violation of the governing documents and any procedure for the
imposition of penalties.
(4) Any standards for
delinquent assessment payment plans.
(5) Any procedures adopted
by the association for resolution of disputes.
(6) Any procedures for
reviewing and approving or disapproving a proposed physical change to a member's separate interest or to the
common area.
(7) Procedures for elections.
(b) Sections 1357.130 and 1357.140 do not
apply to the following actions by the board of directors of an association:
(1) A decision regarding
maintenance of the common area.
(2) A decision on a specific
matter that is not intended to apply generally.
(3) A decision setting the
amount of a regular or special assessment.
(4) A rule change that is
required by law, if the board of directors has no discretion as to the substantive effect of the rule
change.
(5) Issuance of a document
that merely repeats existing law or the governing documents.
§1357
.130
(a) The board of directors shall provide written notice of a proposed rule
change to the members at least 30 days before making the rule change. The notice shall include the text of the proposed rule change and a
description of the purpose and effect of the proposed rule change.
Notice is not required under this subdivision if the board of directors determines that an immediate rule change
is necessary to address an imminent threat to public health or safety or imminent risk of substantial economic
loss to the association.
(b) A decision on a proposed
rule change shall be made at a meeting of the board of directors, after consideration of any comments made by
association members.
(c) As soon as possible
after making a rule change, but not more than 15 days after making the rule change, the board of directors shall
deliver notice of the rule change to every association member. If
the rule change was an emergency rule change made under subdivision (d), the notice shall include the text of
the rule change, a description of the purpose and effect of the rule change, and the date that the rule change
expires.
(d) If the board of
directors determines that an immediate rule change is required to address an imminent threat to public health or
safety, or an imminent risk of substantial economic loss to the association, it may make an emergency rule
change; and no notice is required, as specified in subdivision (a).
An emergency rule change is effective for 120 days, unless the rule change provides for a shorter effective
period. A rule change made under this subdivision may not be
readopted under this subdivision.
(e) A notice required by
this section is subject to Section 1350.7.
§1357
.140
(a) Members of an association owning 5 percent or more of the separate
interests may call a special meeting of the members to reverse a rule change.
(b) A special meeting of the
members may be called by delivering a written request to the president or secretary of the board of directors,
after which the board shall deliver notice of the meeting to the association's members and hold the meeting in
conformity with Section 7511 of the Corporations Code. The written request may
not be delivered more than 30 days after the members of the association are notified of the rule
change. Members are deemed to have been notified of a rule change
on delivery of notice of the rule change, or on enforcement of the resulting rule, whichever is
sooner. For the purposes of Section 8330 of the Corporations
Code, collection of signatures to call a special meeting under
this section is a purpose reasonably related to the interests of the members of the association. A member request to copy or inspect the membership list solely for that
purpose may not be denied on the grounds that the purpose is not reasonably related to the member's interests as
a member.
(c) The rule change may be
reversed by the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes represented and voting at a duly held meeting at
which a quorum is present (which affirmative votes also constitute a majority of the required quorum), or if the
declaration or bylaws require a greater proportion, by the affirmative vote or written ballot of the proportion
required. In lieu of calling the meeting described in this section,
the board may distribute a written ballot to every member of the association in conformity with the requirements
of Section 7513 of the Corporations Code.
(d) Unless otherwise
provided in the declaration or bylaws, for the purposes of this section, a member may cast one vote per separate
interest owned.
(e) A meeting called under
this section is governed by Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 7510) of Part 3 of Division 2 of Title 1 of, and
Sections 7612 and 7613 of, the Corporations Code.
(f) A rule change reversed
under this section may not be readopted for one year after the date of the meeting reversing the rule
change. Nothing in this section precludes the board of directors
from adopting a different rule on the same subject as the rule change that has been reversed.
(g) As soon as possible
after the close of voting, but not more than 15 days after the close of voting, the board of directors shall
provide notice of the results of a member vote held pursuant to this section to every association
member. Delivery of notice under this subdivision is subject to
Section 1350.7.
(h) This section does not
apply to an emergency rule change made under subdivision (d) of
Section 1357.130.
§1357
.150
(a) This article applies to a rule change commenced on or after January 1,
2004.
(b) Nothing in this article
affects the validity of a rule change commenced before January 1, 2004.
(c) For the purposes of this
section, a rule change is commenced when the board of directors of the association takes its first official
action leading to adoption of the rule change.
§1358
(a) In a community apartment project, any conveyance, judicial sale, or other
voluntary or involuntary transfer of the separate interest includes the undivided interest in the community
apartment project. Any conveyance, judicial sale, or other
voluntary or involuntary transfer of the owner's entire estate also includes the owner's membership interest in
the association.
(b) In a condominium project
the common areas are not subject to partition, except as provided in Section 1359. Any conveyance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of
the separate interest includes the undivided interest in the common areas. Any conveyance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of
the owner's entire estate also includes the owner's membership interest in the association.
(c) In a planned
development, any conveyance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of the separate interest
includes the undivided interest in the common areas, if any exist.
Any conveyance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of the owner's entire estate also
includes the owner's membership interest in the association.
(d) In a stock cooperative,
any conveyance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of the separate interest includes the
ownership interest in the corporation, however evidenced. Any
conveyance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of the owner's entire estate also includes
the owner's membership interest in the association.
Nothing in this section prohibits the transfer of exclusive use areas,
independent of any other interest in a common interest subdivision, if authorization to separately transfer
exclusive use areas is expressly stated in the declaration and the transfer occurs in accordance with the terms
of the declaration.
Any restrictions upon the severability of the component interests in
real property which are contained in the declaration shall not be deemed conditions repugnant to the interest
created within the meaning of Section 711 of the Civil
Code. However,
these restrictions shall not extend beyond the period in which the right to partition a project is suspended
under Section 1359.
§1359
(a) Except as provided in this section, the common areas in a condominium
project shall remain undivided, and there shall be no judicial partition thereof. Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prohibit partition of a cotenancy
in a condominium.
(b) The owner of a separate
interest in a condominium project may maintain a partition action as to the entire project as if the owners of
all of the separate interests in the project were tenants in common in the entire project in the same proportion
as their interests in the common areas. The court shall order
partition under this subdivision only by sale of the entire condominium project and only upon a showing of one
of the following:
(1) More than three years
before the filing of the action, the condominium project was damaged or destroyed, so that a material part was
rendered unfit for its prior use, and the condominium project has not been rebuilt or repaired substantially to
its state prior to the damage or destruction.
(2) Three-fourths or more of
the project is destroyed or substantially damaged and owners of separate interests holding in the aggregate more
than a 50-percent interest in the common areas oppose repair or restoration of the project.
(3) The project has been in
existence more than 50 years, is obsolete and uneconomic, and owners of separate interests holding in the
aggregate more than a 50-percent interest in the common area oppose repair or restoration of the
project.
(4) The conditions
for such a sale, set forth in the declaration, have been met.
§1360
(a) Subject to the provisions of the governing documents and other applicable
provisions of law, if the boundaries of the separate interest are contained within a building, the owner of the
separate interest may do the following:
(1) Make any improvements or
alterations within the boundaries of his or her separate interest that do not impair the structural integrity or
mechanical systems or lessen the support of any portions of the common interest development.
(2) Modify a unit in a
condominium project, at the owner's expense, to facilitate access for persons who are blind, visually
handicapped, deaf, or physically disabled, or to alter conditions which could be hazardous to these
persons. These modifications may also include modifications of the
route from the public way to the door of the unit for the purposes of this paragraph if the unit is on the
ground floor or already accessible by an existing ramp or elevator.
The right granted by this paragraph is subject to the following conditions:
(A) The modifications shall
be consistent with applicable building code
requirements.
(B) The modifications shall
be consistent with the intent of otherwise applicable provisions of the governing documents pertaining to safety
or aesthetics.
(C) Modifications external
to the dwelling shall not prevent reasonable passage by other residents, and shall be removed by the owner when
the unit is no longer occupied by persons requiring those modifications who are blind, visually handicapped,
deaf, or physically disabled.
(D) Any owner who intends to
modify a unit pursuant to this paragraph shall submit his or her plans and specifications to the association of
the condominium project for review to determine whether the modifications will comply with the provisions of
this paragraph. The association shall not deny approval of the
proposed modifications under this paragraph without good cause.
(b) Any change in the
exterior appearance of a separate interest shall be in accordance with the governing documents and applicable
provisions of law.
§1360.5
(a) No governing documents shall prohibit the owner of a separate interest
within a common interest development from keeping at least one pet within the common interest development,
subject to reasonable rules and regulations of the association.
This section may not be construed to affect any other rights provided by law to an owner of a separate interest
to keep a pet within the development.
(b) For purposes of this
section, "pet" means any domesticated bird, cat, dog, aquatic animal kept within an aquarium, or other animal as
agreed to between the association and the homeowner.
(c) If the association
implements a rule or regulation restricting the number of pets an owner may keep, the new rule or regulation
shall not apply to prohibit an owner from continuing to keep any pet that the owner currently keeps in his or
her separate interest if the pet otherwise conforms with the previous rules or regulations relating to
pets.
(d) For the purposes of this
section, "governing documents" shall include, but are not limited to, the conditions, covenants, and
restrictions of the common interest development, and the bylaws, rules, and regulations of the
association.
(e) This section shall
become operative on January 1, 2001, and shall only apply to governing documents entered into, amended, or
otherwise modified on or after that date.
§1361
Unless the declaration otherwise provides:
(a) In a community apartment
project and condominium project, and in those planned developments with common areas owned in common by the
owners of the separate interests, there are appurtenant to each separate interest nonexclusive rights of
ingress, egress, and support, if necessary, through the common areas. The common areas are subject to these rights.
(b) In a stock cooperative,
and in a planned development with common areas owned by the association, there is an easement for ingress,
egress, and support, if necessary, appurtenant to each separate interest. The common areas are subject to these easements.
§1361.5
Except as otherwise provided in
law, an order of the court, or an order pursuant to a final and binding arbitration decision, an association may
not deny an owner or occupant physical access to his or her separate interest, either by restricting access
through the common areas to the owner's separate interest, or by restricting access solely to the owner's
separate interest.
§1362
Unless the declaration otherwise
provides, in a condominium project, or in a planned development in which the common areas are owned by the
owners of the separate interests, the common areas are owned as tenants in common, in equal shares, one for each
unit or lot.
§1363
(a) A common interest development shall be managed by an association that may
be incorporated or unincorporated. The association may be referred
to as a community association.
(b) An association, whether
incorporated or unincorporated, shall prepare a budget pursuant to Section 1365 and disclose information, if
requested, in accordance with Section 1368.
(c) Unless the governing
documents provide otherwise, and regardless of whether the association is incorporated or unincorporated, the
association may exercise the powers granted to a nonprofit mutual benefit corporation, as enumerated in Section
7140 of the Corporations Code, except that an unincorporated
association may not adopt or use a corporate seal or issue membership certificates in accordance with Section
7313 of the Corporations Code.
The association, whether incorporated or unincorporated, may exercise
the powers granted to an association in this title.
(d) Meetings of the
membership of the association shall be conducted in accordance with a recognized system of parliamentary
procedure or any parliamentary procedures the association may adopt.
(e) Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, notice of meetings of the members shall specify those matters the board intends to
present for action by the members, but, except as otherwise provided by law, any proper matter may be presented
at the meeting for action.
(f) Members of the
association shall have access to association records, including accounting books and records and membership
lists, in accordance with Article 3 (commencing with Section 8330) of Chapter 13 of Part 3 of Division 2 of
Title 1 of the Corporations Code. The members of the association shall have the same access to the operating
rules of the association as they have to the accounting books and records of the association.
(g) If an association adopts
or has adopted a policy imposing any monetary penalty, including any fee, on any association member for a
violation of the governing documents or rules of the association, including any monetary penalty relating to the
activities of a guest or invitee of a member, the board of directors shall adopt and distribute to each member,
by personal delivery or first-class mail, a schedule of the monetary penalties that may be assessed for those
violations, which shall be in accordance with authorization for member discipline contained in the governing
documents. The board of directors shall not be required to distribute any additional schedules of monetary
penalties unless there are changes from the schedule that was adopted and distributed to the members pursuant to
this subdivision.
(h) When the board of
directors is to meet to consider or impose discipline upon a member, the board shall notify the member in
writing, by either personal delivery or first-class mail, at least 10 days prior to the meeting. The notification shall contain, at a minimum, the date, time, and place of the
meeting, the nature of the alleged violation for which a member may be disciplined, and a statement that the
member has a right to attend and may address the board at the meeting. The board of directors of the association shall meet in executive session if
requested by the member being disciplined.
If the board imposes discipline on a member, the board shall provide the
member a written notification of the disciplinary action, by either personal delivery or first-class mail,
within 15 days following the action. A disciplinary action shall
not be effective against a member unless the board fulfills the requirements of this
subdivision.
(i) Whenever two or more
associations have consolidated any of their functions under a joint neighborhood association or similar
organization, members of each participating association shall be (1) entitled to attend all meetings of the
joint association other than executive sessions, (2) given reasonable opportunity for
participation
in those meetings, and (3) entitled to the same access to the joint association's records as they are to the
participating association's records.
(j) Nothing in this section
shall be construed to create, expand, or reduce the authority of the board of directors of an association to
impose monetary penalties on an association member for a violation of the governing documents or rules of the
association.
§1363
.001
To
the extent existing funds are available, the Department of Consumer Affairs and the Department of Real Estate
shall develop an on-line education course for the board of directors of an association regarding the role,
duties, laws, and responsibilities of board members and prospective board members, and the nonjudicial
foreclosure process.
§1363
.005.
The association shall, at the request of any member, distribute to
the member, in the manner described in Section 1350.7, the following Disclosure Documents
Index:
+----------------------------------------------------+
| Disclosure Documents Index
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| Item|Description |
Reference Code |
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |Assessment and Reserve |Civil
Code Sec. |
|1 |Funding Disclosure |1365.2.5 |
| |Summary (form) |
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |Pro Forma Operating |Civil Code
Sec. |
|2 |Budget or Pro Forma |1365(a)
|
| |Operating Budget Summary |
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |Assessment Collection |Civil
Code Sec. |
|3 |Policy
|1365(e) and
|
| |
|1367.1(a)
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|4 |Notice/Assessments and |Civil
Code Sec. |
| |Foreclosure (form) |1365.1
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |
|
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|5 |Insurance Coverage Summary|Civil Code
Sec. |
| |
|1365(f)
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|6 |Board Minutes Access |Civil
Code Sec. |
| |
|1363.05(e) |
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |Alternative Dispute |Civil Code
Sec. |
|7 |Resolution (ADR) Rights |1369.590 |
| |(summary)
|
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |Internal Dispute |Civil Code
Sec. |
|8 |Resolution (IDR) Rights |1363.850 |
| |(summary)
|
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|9 |Architectural Changes |Civil
Code |
| |Notice
|Sec.1378(c)
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|10 |Secondary Address |Civil Code
Sec. |
| |Notification Request |1367.1(k) |
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|11 |Monetary Penalties |Civil Code
Sec. |
| |Schedule
| 1363(g) |
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
| |
|
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|12 |Reserve Funding Plan |Civil
Code Sec. |
| |(summary)
|1365(b)
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|13 |Review of Financial |Civil Code
Sec. |
| |Statement
|1365(c)
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
|14 |Annual Update of Reserve
|Civil Code
Sec. |
| |Study
|1365(a)
|
+----+--------------------------+--------------------+
§1363
.03
(a) An association shall adopt rules, in accordance with the procedures
prescribed by Article 4 (commencing with Section 1357.100) of Chapter 2, that do all of the
following:
(1) Ensure that if any
candidate or member advocating a point of view is provided access to association media, newsletters, or Internet
Web sites during a campaign, for purposes that are reasonably related to that election, equal access shall be
provided to all candidates and members advocating a point of view, including those not endorsed by the board,
for purposes that are reasonably related to the election. The
association shall not edit or redact any content from these communications, but may include a statement
specifying that the candidate or member, and not the association, is responsible for that
content.
(2) Ensure access to the
common area meeting space, if any exists, during a campaign, at no cost, to all candidates, including those who
are not incumbents, and to all members advocating a point of view, including those not endorsed by the board,
for purposes reasonably related to the election.
(3) Specify the
qualifications for candidates for the board of directors and any other elected position, and procedures for the
nomination of candidates, consistent with the governing documents. A nomination or election procedure shall not be deemed reasonable if it
disallows any member of the association from nominating himself or herself for election to the board of
directors.
(4) Specify the
qualifications for voting, the voting power of each membership, the authenticity, validity, and effect of
proxies, and the voting period for elections, including the times at which polls will open and close, consistent
with the governing documents.
(5) Specify a method of
selecting one or three independent third parties as inspector, or inspectors, of election utilizing one of the
following methods:
(A) Appointment of the
inspector or inspectors by the board.
(B) Election of the
inspector or inspectors by the members of the association.
(C) Any other method for
selecting the inspector or inspectors.
(6) Allow the inspector, or
inspectors, to appoint and oversee additional persons to verify signatures and to count and tabulate votes as
the inspector or inspectors deem appropriate, provided that the persons are independent third
parties.
(b) Notwithstanding any
other law or provision of the governing documents, elections regarding assessments legally requiring a vote,
election and removal of members of the association board of directors, amendments to the governing documents, or
the grant of exclusive use of common area property pursuant to Section 1363.07 shall be held by secret ballot in accordance with the procedures set
forth in this section. A quorum shall be required only if so stated
in the governing documents of the association or other provisions of law. If a quorum is required by the governing documents, each ballot received by the
inspector of elections shall be treated as a member present at a meeting for purposes of establishing a quorum.
An association shall allow for cumulative voting using the secret
ballot procedures provided in this section, if cumulative voting is provided for in the governing
documents.
(c)(1) The association shall
select an independent third party or parties as an inspector of election. The number of inspectors of election shall be one or three.
(2) For the purposes of this
section, an independent third party includes, but is not limited to, a volunteer poll worker with the county
registrar of voters, a licensee of the California Board of Accountancy, or a notary public. An independent third party may be a member of the association, but may not be
a member of the board of directors or a candidate for the board of directors or related to a member of the board
of directors or a candidate for the board of directors. An
independent third party may not be a person, business entity, or subdivision of a business entity who is
currently employed or under contract to the association for any compensable services unless expressly authorized
by rules of the association adopted pursuant to paragraph (5) of subdivision (a).
(3) The inspector or
inspectors of election shall do all of the following:
(A) Determine the number of
memberships entitled to vote and the voting power of each.
(B) Determine the
authenticity, validity, and effect of proxies, if any.
(C) Receive
ballots.
(D) Hear and determine all
challenges and questions in any way arising out of or in connection with the right to vote.
(E) Count and tabulate all
votes.
(F) Determine when the polls
shall close, consistent with the governing documents.
(G) Determine the tabulated
results of the election.
(H) Perform any acts as may
be proper to conduct the election with fairness to all members in accordance with this section, the Corporations
Code, and all applicable rules of the association regarding the
conduct of the election that are not in conflict with this section.
(4) An inspector of election
shall perform his or her duties impartially, in good faith, to the best of his or her ability, and as
expeditiously as is practical. If there are three inspectors of
election, the decision or act of a majority shall be effective in all respects as the decision or act of
all. Any report made by the inspector or inspectors of election is
prima facie evidence of the facts stated in the report.
(d)(1) For purposes of this
section, the following definitions shall apply:
(A) "Proxy" means a written
authorization signed by a member or the authorized representative of the member that gives another member or
members the power to vote on behalf of that member.
(B) "Signed" means the
placing of the member's name on the proxy (whether by manual signature, typewriting, telegraphic transmission,
or otherwise) by the member or authorized representative of the member.
(2) Proxies shall not be
construed or used in lieu of a ballot. An association may use
proxies if permitted or required by the bylaws of the association and if those proxies meet the requirements of
this article, other laws, and the association's governing documents, but the association shall not be required
to prepare or distribute proxies pursuant to this section.
(3) Any instruction given in
a proxy issued for an election that directs the manner in which the proxyholder is to cast the vote shall be set
forth on a separate page of the proxy that can be detached and given to the proxyholder to
retain. The proxyholder shall cast the member's vote by secret
ballot. The proxy may be revoked by the member prior to the
receipt of the ballot by the inspector of elections as described in Section 7613 of the Corporations
Code.
(e) Ballots and two
preaddressed envelopes with instructions on how to return ballots shall be mailed by first-class mail or
delivered by the association to every member not less than 30 days prior to the deadline for
voting. In order to preserve confidentiality, a voter may not be
identified by name, address, or lot, parcel, or unit number on the ballot. The association shall use as a model those procedures used by California
counties for ensuring confidentiality of voter absentee ballots, including all of the
following:
(1) The ballot itself is not
signed by the voter, but is inserted into an envelope that is sealed. This envelope is inserted into a second envelope that is
sealed. In the upper left hand corner of the second envelope,
the voter shall sign his or her name, indicate his or her name, and indicate the address or separate interest
identifier that entitles him or her to vote.
(2) The second envelope is
addressed to the inspector or inspectors of election, who will be tallying the votes. The envelope may be mailed or delivered by hand to a location specified by the
inspector or inspectors of election. The member may request a
receipt for delivery.
(f) All votes shall be
counted and tabulated by the inspector or inspectors of election or his or her designee in public at a properly
noticed open meeting of the board of directors or members. Any
candidate or other member of the association may witness the counting and tabulation of the
votes. No person, including a member of the association or an
employee of the management company, shall open or otherwise review any ballot prior to the time and place at
which the ballots are counted and tabulated. The inspector of
election, or his or her designee, may verify the member's information and signature on the outer envelope
prior to the meeting at which ballots are tabulated. Once a
secret ballot is received by the inspector of elections, it shall be irrevocable.
(g) The tabulated results of
the election shall be promptly reported to the board of directors of the association and shall be recorded in
the minutes of the next meeting of the board of directors and shall be available for review by members of the
association. Within 15 days of the election, the board shall
publicize the tabulated results of the election in a communication directed to all members.
(h) The sealed ballots at
all times shall be in the custody of the inspector or inspectors of election or at a location designated by the
inspector or inspectors until after the tabulation of the vote, and until the time allowed by Section 7527 of
the Corporations Code for challenging the election has expired,
at which time custody shall be transferred to the association. If
there is a recount or other challenge to the election process, the inspector or inspectors of election shall,
upon written request, make the ballots available for inspection and review by an association member or his or
her authorized representative. Any recount shall be conducted in a
manner that preserves the confidentiality of the vote.
(i) After the transfer of
the ballots to the association, the ballots shall be stored by the association in a secure place for no less
than one year after the date of the election.
(j) Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, the rules adopted pursuant to this section may provide for the nomination of candidates
from the floor of membership meetings or nomination by any other manner. Those rules may permit write-in candidates for ballots.
(k) Except for the meeting
to count the votes required in subdivision (f), an election may be conducted entirely by mail unless otherwise
specified in the governing documents.
(l) The provisions of this
section apply to both incorporated and unincorporated associations, notwithstanding any contrary provision of
the governing documents.
(m) The procedures set forth
in this section shall apply to votes cast directly by the membership, but do not apply to votes cast by
delegates or other elected representatives.
(n) In the event of a
conflict between this section and the provisions of the Nonprofit Mutual Benefit Corporation Law (Part 3
(commencing with Section 7110) of Division 2 of Title 1 of the Corporations Code) relating to elections, the provisions of this section shall
prevail.
(o) The amendments made to
this section by the act adding this subdivision shall become operative on July 1, 2006.
§1363
.04
(a) Association funds shall not be used for campaign purposes in connection
with any association board election. Funds of the association shall
not be used for campaign purposes in connection with any other association election except to the extent
necessary to comply with duties of the association imposed by law.
(b) For the purposes of this
section, "campaign purposes" includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Expressly advocating the
election or defeat of any candidate that is on the association election ballot.
(2) Including the photograph
or prominently featuring the name of any candidate on a communication from the association or its board,
excepting the ballot and ballot materials, within 30 days of an election. This is not a campaign purpose if the communication is one for which
subdivision (a) of Section 1363.03 requires that equal access be
provided to another candidate or advocate.
§1363
.05
(a) This section shall be known and
may be cited as the Common Interest Development Open Meeting Act.
(b) Any member of the
association may attend meetings of the board of directors of the association, except when the board adjourns to
executive session to consider litigation, matters relating to the formation of contracts with third parties,
member discipline, personnel matters, or to meet with a member, upon the member's request, regarding the
member's payment of assessments, as specified in Section 1367 or 1367.1. The board of directors of the association shall meet in executive session, if
requested by a member who may be subject to a fine, penalty, or other form of discipline, and the member shall
be entitled to attend the executive session.
(c) Any matter discussed in
executive session shall be generally noted in the minutes of the immediately following meeting that is open to
the entire membership.
(d) The minutes, minutes
proposed for adoption that are marked to indicate draft status, or a summary of the minutes, of any meeting of
the board of directors of an association, other than an executive session, shall be available to members within
30 days of the meeting. The minutes, proposed minutes, or summary
minutes shall be distributed to any member of the association upon request and upon reimbursement of the
association's costs for making that distribution.
(e) Members of the
association shall be notified in writing at the time that the pro forma budget required in Section 1365 is
distributed, or at the time of any general mailing to the entire membership of the association, of their right
to have copies of the minutes of meetings of the board of directors, and how and where those minutes may be
obtained.
(f) Unless the time and
place of meeting is fixed by the bylaws, or unless the bylaws provide for a longer period of notice, members
shall be given notice of the time and place of a meeting as defined in subdivision (j), except for an emergency
meeting, at least four days prior to the meeting. Notice shall be
given by posting the notice in a prominent place or places within the common area and by mail to any owner who
had requested notification of board meetings by mail, at the address requested by the owner. Notice may also be given, by mail or delivery of the notice to each unit in
the development or by newsletter or similar means of communication.
The notice shall contain the agenda for the meeting.
(g) An emergency meeting of
the board may be called by the president of the association, or by any two members of the governing body other
than the president, if there are circumstances that could not have been reasonably foreseen which require
immediate attention and possible action by the board, and which of necessity make it impracticable to provide
notice as required by this section.
(h) The board of directors
of the association shall permit any member of the association to speak at any meeting of the association or the
board of directors, except for meetings of the board held in executive session. A reasonable time limit for all members of the association to speak to the
board of directors or before a meeting of the association shall be established by the board of
directors.
(i)(1) Except as described
in paragraphs (2) to (4), inclusive, the board of directors of the association may not discuss or take action on
any item at a nonemergency meeting unless the item was placed on the agenda included in the notice that was
posted and distributed pursuant to subdivision (f). This
subdivision does not prohibit a resident who is not a member of the board from speaking on issues not on the
agenda.
(2) Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), a member of the board of directors, a managing agent or other agent of the board of directors, or
a member of the staff of the board of directors, may do any of the following:
(A) Briefly respond to
statements made or questions posed by a person speaking at a meeting as described in subdivision
(h).
(B) Ask a question for
clarification, make a brief announcement, or make a brief report on his or her own activities, whether in
response to questions posed by a member of the association or based upon his or her own
initiative.
(3) Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), the board of directors or a member of the board of directors, subject to rules or procedures of
the board of directors, may do any of the following:
(A) Provide a reference to,
or provide other resources for factual information to, its managing agent or other agents or
staff.
(B) Request its managing
agent or other agents or staff to report back to the board of directors at a subsequent meeting concerning any
matter, or take action to direct its managing agent or other agents or staff to place a matter of business on a
future agenda.
(C) Direct its managing
agent or other agents or staff to perform administrative tasks that are necessary to carry out this
subdivision.
(4) (A) Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), the board of directors may take action on any item of business not appearing on the agenda posted
and distributed pursuant to subdivision (f) under any of the following conditions:
(i) Upon a determination
made by a majority of the board of directors present at the meeting that an emergency situation
exists. An emergency situation exists if there are circumstances
that could not have been reasonably foreseen by the board, that require immediate attention and possible action
by the board, and that, of necessity, make it impracticable to provide notice.
(ii) Upon a determination
made by the board by a vote of two-thirds of the members present at the meeting, or, if less than two-thirds of
total membership of the board is present at the meeting, by a unanimous vote of the members present, that there
is a need to take immediate action and that the need for action came to the attention of the board after the
agenda was posted and distributed pursuant to subdivision (f).
(iii) The item appeared on
an agenda that was posted and distributed pursuant to subdivision (f) for a prior meeting of the board of
directors that occurred not more than 30 calendar days before the date that action is taken on the item and, at
the prior meeting, action on the item was continued to the meeting at which the action is
taken.
(B) Before discussing any
item pursuant to this paragraph, the board of directors shall openly identify the item to the members in
attendance at the meeting.
(j) As used in this section,
"meeting" includes any congregation of a majority of the members of the board at the same time and place to
hear, discuss, or deliberate upon any item of business scheduled to be heard by the board, except those matters
that may be discussed in executive session.
§1363
.07
(a) After an association acquires fee title to, or any easement right over, a
common area, unless the association's governing documents specify a different percentage, the affirmative vote
of members owning at least 67 percent of the separate interests in the common interest development shall be
required before the board of directors may grant exclusive use of any portion of that common area to any member,
except for any of the following:
(1) A reconveyance of all or
any portion of that common area to the subdivider to enable the continuation of development that is in
substantial conformance with a detailed plan of phased development submitted to the Real Estate Commissioner
with the application for a public report.
(2) Any grant of exclusive
use that is in substantial conformance with a detailed plan of phased development submitted to the Real Estate
Commissioner with the application for a public report or in accordance with the governing documents approved by
the Real Estate Commissioner.
(3) Any grant of exclusive
use that is for any of the following reasons:
(A) To eliminate or correct
engineering errors in documents recorded with the county recorder or on file with a public agency or utility
company.
(B) To eliminate or correct
encroachments due to errors in construction of any improvements.
(C) To permit changes in the
plan of development submitted to the Real Estate Commissioner in circumstances where the changes are the result
of topography, obstruction, hardship, aesthetic considerations, or environmental conditions.
(D) To fulfill the
requirement of a public agency.
(E) To transfer the burden
of management and maintenance of any common area that is generally inaccessible and not of general use to the
membership at large of the association.
(F) Any grant in connection
with an expressly zoned industrial or commercial development, or any grant within a subdivision of the type
defined in Section 1373.
(b) Any measure placed
before the members requesting that the board of directors grant exclusive use of any portion of the common area
shall specify whether the association will receive any monetary consideration for the grant and whether the
association or the transferee will be responsible for providing any insurance coverage for exclusive use of the
common area.
§1363
.09
(a) A member of an association may bring a civil action for declaratory or equitable relief for a violation of this
article by an association of which he or she is a member, including, but not limited to, injunctive relief,
restitution, or a combination thereof, within one year of the date the cause of action accrues. Upon a finding that the election procedures of this article, or the adoption
of and adherence to rules provided by Article 4 (commencing with Section 1357.100) of Chapter 2, were not
followed, a court may void any results of the election.
(b) A member who prevails in
a civil action to enforce his or her rights pursuant to this
article shall be entitled to reasonable attorney's fees and court costs, and the court may impose a
civil penalty of up to five hundred dollars ($500) for each
violation, except that each identical violation shall be subject to only one penalty if the violation affects
each member of the association equally. A prevailing association
shall not recover any costs, unless the court finds the action to be frivolous, unreasonable, or without
foundation.
(c) A cause of action under
Section 1363.03 with respect to access to association resources
by a candidate or member advocating a point of view, the receipt of a ballot by a member, or the counting,
tabulation, or reporting of, or access to, ballots for inspection and review after tabulation may be brought in
small claims court if the amount of the demand does not exceed the jurisdiction of that court.
§1363
.1
(a) A prospective managing agent of a common interest development shall
provide a written statement to the board of directors of the association of a common interest development as
soon as practicable, but in no event more than 90 days, before entering into a management agreement which shall
contain all of the following information concerning the managing agent:
(1) The names and business
addresses of the owners or general partners of the managing agent.
If the managing agent is a corporation, the written statement shall include the names and business addresses of
the directors and officers and shareholders holding greater than 10 percent of the shares of the
corporation.
(2) Whether or not any
relevant licenses such as architectural design, construction, engineering, real estate, or accounting have been
issued by this state and are currently held by the persons specified in paragraph (1). If a license is currently held by any of those persons, the statement shall
contain the following information:
(A) What license is
held.
(B) The dates the license is
valid.
(C) The name of the licensee
appearing on that license.
(3) Whether or not any
relevant professional certifications or designations such as architectural design, construction, engineering,
real property management, or accounting are currently held by any of the persons specified in paragraph (1),
including, but not limited to, a professional common interest development manager. If any certification or
designation is held, the statement shall include the following information:
(A) What the certification
or designation is and what entity issued it.
(B) The dates the
certification or designation is valid.
(C) The names in which the
certification or designation is held.
(b) As used in this section,
a "managing agent" is a person or entity who, for compensation or in expectation of compensation, exercises
control over the assets of a common interest development. A
"managing agent" does not include either of the following:
(1) A full-time employee of
the association.
(2) Any regulated financial
institution operating within the normal course of its regulated business practice.
§1363
.2
(a) A managing agent of a common interest development who accepts or receives
funds belonging to the association shall deposit all such funds that are not placed into an escrow account with
a bank, savings association, or credit union or into an account under the control of the association, into a
trust fund account maintained by the managing agent in a bank, savings association, or credit union in this
state. All funds deposited by the managing agent in the trust fund
account shall be kept in this state in a financial institution, as defined in Section 31041 of the Financial
Code, which is insured by the federal government, and shall be
maintained there until disbursed in accordance with written instructions from the association entitled to the
funds.
(b) At the written
request of the board of directors of the association, the funds the managing agent accepts or receives on behalf
of the association shall be deposited into an interest-bearing account in a bank, savings association, or credit
union in this state, provided all of the following requirements are met:
(1) The account is in the
name of the managing agent as trustee for the association or in the name of the association.
(2) All of the funds in the
account are covered by insurance provided by an agency of the federal government.
(3) The funds in the account
are kept separate, distinct, and apart from the funds belonging to the managing agent or to any other person or
entity for whom the managing agent holds funds in trust except that the funds of various associations may be
commingled as permitted pursuant to subdivision (d).
(4) The managing agent
discloses to the board of directors of the association the nature of the account, how interest will be
calculated and paid, whether service charges will be paid to the depository and by whom, and any notice
requirements or penalties for withdrawal of funds from the account.
(5) No interest earned on
funds in the account shall inure directly or indirectly to the benefit of the managing agent or his or her
employees.
(c) The managing agent shall
maintain a separate record of the receipt and disposition of all funds described in this section, including any
interest earned on the funds.
(d) The managing
agent shall not commingle the funds of the association with his or her own money or with the money of others
that he or she receives or accepts, unless all of the following requirements are met:
(1) The managing agent
commingled the funds of various associations on or before February 26, 1990, and has obtained a written
agreement with the board of directors of each association that he or she will maintain a fidelity and surety
bond in an amount that provides adequate protection to the associations as agreed upon by the managing agent and
the board of directors of each association.
(2) The managing agent
discloses in the written agreement whether he or she is deriving benefits from the commingled account or the
bank, credit union, or savings institution where the moneys will be on deposit.
(3) The written agreement
provided pursuant to this subdivision includes, but is not limited to, the name and address of the bonding
companies, the amount of the bonds, and the expiration dates of the bonds.
(4) If there are any changes
in the bond coverage or the companies providing the coverage, the managing agent discloses that fact to the
board of directors of each affected association as soon as practical, but in no event more than 10 days after
the change.
(5) The bonds assure the
protection of the association and provide the association at least 10 days' notice prior to
cancellation.
(6) Completed payments on
the behalf of the association are deposited within 24 hours or the next business day and do not remain
commingled for more than 10 calendar days.
(e) The prevailing
party in an action to enforce this section shall be entitled to recover reasonable legal fees and court
costs.
(f) As used in this section,
a "managing agent" is a person or entity, who for compensation or, in expectation of compensation, exercises
control over the assets of the association. However, a "managing
agent" does not include a full-time employee of the association or a regulated financial institution operating
within the normal course of business, or an attorney at law acting within the scope of his or her
license.
(g) As used in this section,
"completed payment" means funds received which clearly identify the account to which the funds are to be
credited.
§1363
.
5 (a) The articles of incorporation of a common interest development
association filed with the Secretary of State on or after January 1, 1995, shall include a statement, which
shall be in addition to the statement of purposes of the corporation, that does all of the
following:
(1) Identifies the
corporation as an association formed to manage a common interest development under the Davis-Stirling Common
Interest Development Act.
(2) States the business or
corporate office of the association, if any, and, if the office is not on the site of the common interest
development, states the nine-digit ZIP Code, front street, and
nearest cross street for the physical location of the common interest development.
(3) States the name
and address of the association's managing agent, as defined in Section 1363.1, if any.
(b) The statement of
principal business activity contained in the annual statement filed by an incorporated association with the
Secretary of State pursuant to Section 1502 of the Corporations Code shall also contain the statement specified in subdivision
(a).
§1363
.6
(a) To assist with the identification of common interest developments, each
association, whether incorporated or unincorporated, shall submit to the Secretary of State, on a form and for a
fee not to exceed thirty dollars ($30) that the Secretary of State shall prescribe, the following information
concerning the association and the development that it manages:
(1) A statement that the
association is formed to manage a common interest development under the Davis-Stirling Common Interest
Development Act.
(2) The name of the
association.
(3) The street address of
the association's onsite office, or, if none, of the responsible officer or managing agent of the
association.
(4) The name, address, and
either the daytime telephone number or e-mail address of the president of the association, other than the
address, telephone number, or e-mail address of the association's onsite office or managing agent of the
association.
(5) The name, street address, and daytime telephone number of the
association's managing agent, if any.
(6) The county, and if in an
incorporated area, the city in which the development is physically located. If the boundaries of the development are physically located in more than one
county, each of the counties in which it is located.
(7) If the development is in
an unincorporated area, the city closest in proximity to the development.
(8) The nine-digit ZIP
Code, front street, and nearest cross street of the physical
location of the development.
(9) The type of common
interest development, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1351, managed by the
association.
(10) The number of separate
interests, as defined in subdivision (l) of Section 1351, in the development.
(b) The association shall
submit the information required by this section as follows:
(1) By incorporated
associations, within 90 days after the filing of its original articles of incorporation, and thereafter at the
time the association files its biennial statement of principal business activity with the Secretary of State
pursuant to Section 8210 of the Corporations Code.
(2) By unincorporated
associations, in July of 2003, and in that same month biennially thereafter. Upon changing its status to that of a corporation, the association shall
comply with the filing deadlines in paragraph (1).
(c) The association shall
notify the Secretary of State of any change in the street address of the association's onsite office or of the
responsible officer or managing agent of the association in the form and for a fee prescribed by the Secretary
of State, within 60 days of the change.
(d) On and after January 1,
2006, the penalty for an incorporated association's noncompliance with the initial or biennial filing
requirements of this section shall be suspension of the association's rights, privileges, and powers as a
corporation and monetary penalties, to the same extent and in the same manner as suspension and monetary
penalties imposed pursuant to Section 8810 of the Corporations Code.
(e) The Secretary of State
shall make the information submitted pursuant to paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) available only for
governmental purposes and only to Members of the Legislature and the Business, Transportation and Housing
Agency, upon written request. All other information submitted
pursuant to this section shall be subject to public inspection pursuant to the California Public Records Act,
Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of
Title 1 of the Government Code. The information submitted pursuant to this section shall be made available for
governmental or public inspection, as the case may be, on or before July 1, 2004, and
thereafter.
§1363
.
810 (a) This article applies to a dispute between an association and a member
involving their rights, duties, or liabilities under this title, under the Nonprofit Mutual Benefit
Corporation Law (Part 3 (commencing with Section 7110) of Division 2 of Title 1 of the Corporations
Code), or under the governing documents of the common
interest development or association.
(b) This article
supplements, and does not replace, Article 2 (commencing with Section 1369.510) of Chapter 7, relating to
alternative dispute resolution as a prerequisite to an enforcement action.
§1363
.820
(a) An association shall provide a fair, reasonable, and expeditious
procedure for resolving a dispute within the scope of this article.
(b) In developing a
procedure pursuant to this article, an association shall make maximum, reasonable use of available local dispute
resolution programs involving a neutral third party, including low-cost mediation programs such as those listed
on the Internet Web sites of the Department of Consumer Affairs and the United States Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
(c) If an association does
not provide a fair, reasonable, and expeditious procedure for resolving a dispute within the scope of this
article, the procedure provided in Section 1363.840 applies and
satisfies the requirement of subdivision (a).
§1363
.830
A fair, reasonable, and
expeditious dispute resolution procedure shall at a minimum satisfy all of the following
requirements:
(a) The procedure may be
invoked by either party to the dispute. A request invoking the
procedure shall be in writing.
(b) The procedure shall
provide for prompt deadlines. The procedure shall state the maximum
time for the association to act on a request invoking the procedure.
(c) If the
procedure is invoked by a member, the association shall participate in the procedure.
(d) If the procedure is
invoked by the association, the member may elect not to participate in the procedure. If the member participates but the dispute is resolved other than by agreement
of the member, the member shall have a right of appeal to the association's board of directors.
(e) A resolution of a
dispute pursuant to the procedure, that is not in conflict with the law or the governing documents, binds the
association and is judicially enforceable. An agreement reached
pursuant to the procedure, that is not in conflict with the law or the governing documents, binds the parties
and is judicially enforceable.
(f) The procedure shall
provide a means by which the member and the association may explain their positions.
(g) A member of the
association shall not be charged a fee to participate in the process.
§1363
.840
(a) This section applies in an association that does not otherwise provide a
fair, reasonable, and expeditious dispute resolution procedure. The
procedure provided in this section is fair, reasonable, and expeditious, within the meaning of this
article.
(b) Either party to a
dispute within the scope of this article may invoke the following procedure:
(1) The party may request
the other party to meet and confer in an effort to resolve the dispute. The request shall be in writing.
(2) A member of an
association may refuse a request to meet and confer. The
association may not refuse a request to meet and confer.
(3) The association's board
of directors shall designate a member of the board to meet and confer.
(4) The parties shall meet
promptly at a mutually convenient time and place, explain their positions to each other, and confer in good
faith in an effort to resolve the dispute.
(5) A resolution of the
dispute agreed to by the parties shall be memorialized in writing and signed by the parties, including the board
designee on behalf of the association.
(c) An agreement reached
under this section binds the parties and is judicially enforceable if both of the following conditions are
satisfied:
(1) The agreement is not in
conflict with law or the governing documents of the common interest development or association.
(2) The agreement is either
consistent with the authority granted by the board of directors to its designee or the agreement is ratified by
the board of directors.
(d) A member of the
association may not be charged a fee to participate in the process.
§1363
.850
The
notice provided pursuant to Section 1369.590 shall include a description of the internal dispute resolution
process provided pursuant to this article.
§1364
(a) Unless otherwise provided in the declaration of a common interest
development, the association is responsible for repairing, replacing, or maintaining the common areas, other
than exclusive use common areas, and the owner of each separate interest is responsible for maintaining that
separate interest and any exclusive use common area appurtenant to the separate interest.
(b)(1) In a community
apartment project, condominium project, or stock cooperative, as defined in Section 1351, unless otherwise
provided in the declaration, the association is responsible for the repair and maintenance of the common area
occasioned by the presence of wood-destroying pests or organisms.
(2) In a planned development
as defined in Section 1351, unless a different maintenance scheme is provided in the declaration, each owner of
a separate interest is responsible for the repair and maintenance of that separate interest as may be occasioned
by the presence of wood-destroying pests or organisms. Upon
approval of the majority of all members of the association, the responsibility for such repair and maintenance
may be delegated to the association, which shall be entitled to recover the cost thereof as a special
assessment.
(c) The costs of temporary
relocation during the repair and maintenance of the areas within the responsibility of the association shall be
borne by the owner of the separate interest affected.
(d)(1) The association may
cause the temporary, summary removal of any occupant of a common interest development for such periods and at
such times as may be necessary for prompt, effective treatment of wood-destroying pests or
organisms.
(2) The association shall
give notice of the need to temporarily vacate a separate interest to the occupants and to the owners, not less
than 15 days nor more than 30 days prior to the date of the temporary relocation. The notice shall state the reason for the temporary relocation, the date and
time of the beginning of treatment, the anticipated date and time of termination of treatment, and that the
occupants will be responsible for their own accommodations during the temporary relocation.
(3) Notice by the
association shall be deemed complete upon either:
(A) Personal delivery of a
copy of the notice to the occupants, and sending a copy of the
notice to the owners, if different than the occupants, by first-class mail, postage prepaid at the most current
address shown on the books of the association.
(B) By sending a copy of the
notice to the occupants at the separate interest address and a copy of the notice to the owners, if different
than the occupants, by first-class mail, postage prepaid, at the most current address shown on the books of the
association.
(e) For purposes of this
section, "occupant" means an owner, resident, guest, invitee, tenant, lessee, sublessee, or other person in
possession on the separate interest.
(f) Notwithstanding the
provisions of the declaration, the owner of a separate interest is entitled to reasonable access to the common
areas for the purpose of maintaining the internal and external telephone wiring made part of the exclusive use
common areas of a separate interest pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (i) of Section 1351. The access shall be subject to the consent of the association, whose approval
shall not be unreasonably withheld, and which may include the association's approval of telephone wiring upon
the exterior of the common areas, and other conditions as the association determines
reasonable.
§1365
Unless the governing documents impose more stringent standards, the association
shall prepare and distribute to all of its members the following documents:
(a) A pro forma operating
budget, which shall include all of the following:
(1) The estimated revenue
and expenses on an accrual basis.
(2) A summary of the
association's reserves based upon the most recent review or study conducted pursuant to Section 1365.5, based only on assets held in cash or cash equivalents, which shall
be printed in boldface type and include all of the following:
(A) The current estimated
replacement cost, estimated remaining life, and estimated useful life of each major component.
(B) As of the end of the
fiscal year for which the study is prepared:
(i) The current estimate of the amount of cash reserves necessary to repair,
replace, restore, or maintain the major components.
(ii) The current amount of
accumulated cash reserves actually set aside to repair, replace, restore, or maintain major
components.
(iii) If applicable, the
amount of funds received from either a compensatory damage award or settlement to an association from any person
or entity for injuries to property, real or personal, arising out of any construction or design defects, and the
expenditure or disposition of funds, including the amounts expended for the direct and indirect costs of repair
of construction or design defects. These amounts shall be reported
at the end of the fiscal year for which the study is prepared as separate line items under cash reserves
pursuant to clause (ii). Instead of complying with the requirements
set forth in this clause, an association that is obligated to issue a review of their financial statement
pursuant to subdivision (b) may include in the review a statement containing all of the information required by
this clause.
(C) The percentage that the
amount determined for purposes of clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) equals the amount determined for purposes of
clause (i) of subparagraph (B).
(D) The current deficiency
in reserve funding expressed on a per unit basis. The figure shall
be calculated by subtracting the amount determined for purposes of clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) from the
amount determined for purposes of clause (i) of subparagraph (B) and then dividing the result by the number of
separate interests within the association, except that if assessments vary by the size or type of ownership
interest, then the association shall calculate the current deficiency in a manner that reflects the
variation.
(3) A statement as to all of
the following:
(A) Whether the board of
directors of the association has determined to defer or not undertake repairs or replacement of any major
component with a remaining life of 30 years or less, including a justification for the deferral or decision not
to undertake the repairs or replacement.
(B) Whether the board of
directors of the association, consistent with the reserve funding plan adopted pursuant to subdivision (e) of
Section 1365.5, has determined or anticipates that the levy of
one or more special assessments will be required to repair, replace, or restore any major component or to
provide adequate reserves therefor. If so, the statement shall also
set out the estimated amount, commencement date, and duration of the assessment.
(C) The mechanism or
mechanisms by which the board of directors will fund reserves to repair or replace major components, including
assessments, borrowing, use of other assets, deferral of selected replacements or repairs, or alternative
mechanisms.
(D) Whether the association
has any outstanding loans with an original term of more than one year, including the payee, interest rate,
amount outstanding, annual payment, and when the loan is scheduled to be retired.
(4) A general statement
addressing the procedures used for the calculation and establishment of those reserves to defray the future
repair, replacement, or additions to those major components that the association is obligated to maintain. The
report shall include, but need not be limited to, reserve calculations made using the formula described in
paragraph (4) of subdivision (b) of Section 1365.2.5, and may
not assume a rate of return on cash reserves in excess of 2 percent above the discount rate published by the
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco at the time the calculation was made.
The summary of the association's reserves disclosed pursuant to
paragraph (2) shall not be admissible in evidence to show improper financial management of an association,
provided that other relevant and competent evidence of the financial condition of the association is not made
inadmissible by this provision.
Notwithstanding a contrary provision in the governing documents, a copy
of the operating budget shall be annually distributed not less than 30 days nor more than 90 days prior to the
beginning of the association's fiscal year.
(b) Commencing January 1,
2009, a summary of the reserve funding plan adopted by the board of directors of the association, as specified
in paragraph (4) of subdivision (e) of Section 1365.5. The summary shall
include notice to members that the full reserve study plan is available upon request, and the association shall
provide the full reserve plan to any member upon request.
(c) A review of the
financial statement of the association shall be prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles by a licensee of the California Board of Accountancy for any fiscal year in which the gross income to
the association exceeds seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000). A
copy of the review of the financial statement shall be distributed within 120 days after the close of each
fiscal year.
(d) Instead of the
distribution of the pro forma operating budget required by subdivision (a), the board of directors may elect to
distribute a summary of the pro forma operating budget to all of its members with a written notice that the pro
forma operating budget is available at the business office of the association or at another suitable location
within the boundaries of the development, and that copies will be provided upon request and at the expense of
the association. If any member requests that a copy of the pro
forma operating budget required by subdivision (a) be mailed to the member, the association shall provide the
copy to the member by first-class United States mail at the expense of the association and delivered within five
days. The written notice that is distributed to each of the
association members shall be in at least 10-point boldface type on the front page of the summary of the
budget.
(e) A statement describing
the association's policies and practices in enforcing lien rights or other legal remedies for default in payment
of its assessments against its members shall be annually delivered to the members not less than 30 days nor more
than 90 days immediately preceding the beginning of the association's fiscal year.
(f)(1) A summary of the
association's property, general liability, earthquake, flood, and fidelity insurance policies, which shall be
distributed not less than 30 days nor more than 90 days preceding the beginning of the association's fiscal
year, that includes all of the following information about each policy:
(A) The name of the
insurer.
(B) The type of
insurance.
(C) The policy limits of the
insurance.
(D) The amount of
deductibles, if any.
(2) The association shall,
as soon as reasonably practicable, notify its members by first-class mail if any of the policies described in
paragraph (1) have lapsed, been canceled, and are not immediately renewed, restored, or replaced, or if there is
a significant change, such as a reduction in coverage or limits or an increase in the deductible, as to any of
those policies. If the association receives any notice of
nonrenewal of a policy described in paragraph (1), the association shall immediately notify its members if
replacement coverage will not be in effect by the date the existing coverage will lapse.
(3) To the extent that any
of the information required to be disclosed pursuant to paragraph (1) is specified in the insurance policy
declaration page, the association may meet its obligation to disclose that information by making copies of that
page and distributing it to all of its members.
(4) The summary distributed
pursuant to paragraph (1) shall contain, in at least 10-point boldface type, the following statement:
"This summary
of the association's policies of insurance provides only certain information, as required by subdivision (f) of
Section 1365 of the Civil Code, and should not
be considered a substitute for the complete policy terms and conditions contained in the actual policies of
insurance. Any association member may, upon request and provision
of reasonable notice, review the association's insurance policies and, upon request and payment of reasonable
duplication charges, obtain copies of those policies. Although the
association maintains the policies of insurance specified in this summary, the association's policies of
insurance may not cover your property, including personal property or, real property improvements to or around
your dwelling, or personal injuries or other losses that occur within or around your dwelling. Even if a loss is covered, you may nevertheless be responsible for paying all
or a portion of any deductible that applies. Association members
should consult with their individual insurance broker or agent for appropriate additional
coverage."
§1365
.1
(a) The association shall distribute the written notice described in
subdivision (b) to each member of the association during the 60-day period immediately preceding the beginning
of the association's fiscal year. The notice shall be printed in at
least 12-point type. An association distributing the notice to an
owner of an interest that is described in Section 11212 of the Business and Professions Code that is not otherwise exempt from this section pursuant to subdivision
(a) of Section 11211.7 may delete from the notice described in subdivision (b) the portion regarding meetings
and payment plans.
(b) The notice required by
this section shall read as follows:
"NOTICE
ASSESSMENTS AND FORECLOSURE
This notice outlines some of the rights and responsibilities of owners
of property in common interest developments and the associations that manage them. Please refer to the sections of the Civil Code indicated for
further information. A portion of the information in this notice
applies only to liens recorded on or after January 1, 2003. You may
wish to consult a lawyer if you dispute an assessment.
ASSESSMENTS AND
FORECLOSURE
Assessments become delinquent 15 days after they are due, unless the
governing documents provide for a longer time. The failure to pay
association assessments may result in the loss of an owner's property through foreclosure. Foreclosure may occur either as a result of a court action, known as judicial
foreclosure or without court action, often referred to as nonjudicial foreclosure. For liens recorded on and after January 1, 2006, an association may not use
judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure to enforce that lien if the amount of the delinquent assessments or dues,
exclusive of any accelerated assessments, late charges, fees, attorney's fees, interest, and costs of
collection, is less than one thousand eight hundred dollars ($1,800). For delinquent assessments or dues in excess of one thousand eight hundred
dollars ($1,800) or more than 12 months delinquent, an association may use judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure
subject to the conditions set forth in Section 1367.4 of the Civil Code. When using judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure, the association records a lien
on the owner's property. The owner's property may be sold to
satisfy the lien if the amounts secured by the lien are not paid.
(Sections 1366, 1367.1, and 1367.4 of the Civil Code)
In a judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure, the association may recover
assessments, reasonable costs of collection, reasonable attorney's fees, late charges, and
interest. The association may not use nonjudicial foreclosure to
collect fines or penalties, except for costs to repair common areas damaged by a member or a member's guests,
if the governing documents provide for this. (Sections 1366 and
1367.1 of the Civil Code)
The association must comply with the requirements of Section 1367.1 of
the Civil Code
when collecting delinquent assessments. If the association fails to follow these requirements, it may not record
a lien on the owner's property until it has satisfied those requirements. Any additional costs that result from satisfying the requirements are the
responsibility of the association. (Section 1367.1 of the
Civil Code)
At least 30 days prior to recording a lien on an owner's separate
interest, the association must provide the owner of record with certain documents by certified mail, including a
description of its collection and lien enforcement procedures and the method of calculating the
amount. It must also provide an itemized statement of the charges
owed by the owner. An owner has a right to review the association's
records to verify the debt. (Section 1367.1 of the Civil Code)
If a lien is recorded against an owner's property in error, the person
who recorded the lien is required to record a lien release within 21 days, and to provide an owner certain
documents in this regard. (Section 1367.1 of the Civil Code)
The collection practices of the association may be governed by state and
federal laws regarding fair debt collection. Penalties can be
imposed for debt collection practices that violate these laws.
PAYMENTS
When an owner makes a payment, he or she may request a receipt, and the
association is required to provide it. On the receipt, the
association must indicate the date of payment and the person who received it. The association must inform owners of a mailing address for overnight
payments. (Section 1367.1 of the Civil Code)
An owner may, but is not obligated to, pay under protest any disputed
charge or sum levied by the association, including, but not limited to, an assessment, fine, penalty, late fee,
collection cost, or monetary penalty imposed as a disciplinary measure, and by so doing, specifically reserve
the right to contest the disputed charge or sum in court or otherwise.
An owner may dispute an assessment debt by submitting a written request
for dispute resolution to the association as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 1368.810) of
Chapter 4 of Title 6 of Division 2 of the Civil Code. In addition, an
association may not initiate a foreclosure without participating in alternative dispute resolution with a
neutral third party as set forth in Article 2 (commencing with Section 1369.510) of Chapter 7 of Title 6 of
Division 2 of the Civil Code, if so requested by the owner. Binding arbitration shall not be available if the association intends to
initiate a judicial foreclosure.
An owner is not liable for charges, interest, and costs of collection,
if it is established that the assessment was paid properly on time.
(Section 1367.1 of the Civil Code)
MEETINGS AND
PAYMENT PLANS
An owner of a separate interest that is not a timeshare may request the
association to consider a payment plan to satisfy a delinquent assessment. The association must inform owners of the standards for payment plans, if any
exist. (Section 1367.1 of the Civil Code)
The board of directors must meet with an owner who makes a proper
written request for a meeting to discuss a payment plan when the owner has received a notice of a delinquent
assessment. These payment plans must conform with the payment plan
standards of the association, if they exist. (Section 1367.1 of the
Civil Code)"
(c) A member of an
association may provide written notice by facsimile transmission or United States mail to the association of a
secondary address. If a secondary address is provided, the
association shall send any and all correspondence and legal notices required pursuant to this article to both
the primary and the secondary address.
§1365
.2
(a) For the purposes of this section, the following definitions shall
apply:
(1) "Association records"
means all of the following:
(A) Any financial document
required to be provided to a member in Section 1365.
(B) Any financial document
or statement required to be provided in Section 1368.
(C) Interim
financial statements, periodic or as compiled, containing any of the following:
(i) Balance
sheet.
(ii) Income and expense
statement.
(iii) Budget
comparison.
(iv) General
ledger. A "general ledger" is a report that shows all transactions
that occurred in an association account over a specified period of time.
The records described in this subparagraph shall be prepared in
accordance with an accrual or modified accrual basis of accounting.
(D) Executed contracts not
otherwise privileged under law.
(E) Written board approval
of vendor or contractor proposals or invoices.
(F) State and federal tax
returns.
(G) Reserve account balances
and records of payments made from reserve accounts.
(H) Agendas and minutes of
meetings of the members, the board of directors and any committees appointed by the board of directors pursuant
to Section 7212 of the Corporations Code; excluding, however,
agendas, minutes, and other information from executive sessions of the board of directors as described in
Section 1363.05.
(I)(i) Membership lists,
including name, property address, and mailing address, if the conditions set forth in clause (ii) are met and
except as otherwise provided in clause (iii).
(ii) The member requesting
the list shall state the purpose for which the list is requested which purpose shall be reasonably related to
the requester's interest as a member. If the association reasonably
believes that the information in the list will be used for another purpose, it may deny the member access to the
list. If the request is denied, in any subsequent action brought by
the member under subdivision (f), the association shall have the burden to prove that the member would have
allowed use of the information for purposes unrelated to his or her interest as a member.
(iii) A member of the
association may opt out of the sharing of his or her name, property address, and mailing address by notifying
the association in writing that he or she prefers to be contacted via the alternative process described in
subdivision (c) of Section 8330 of the Corporations Code. This opt-out shall remain
in effect until changed by the member.
(J) Check
registers.
(2) "Enhanced association
records" means invoices, receipts and canceled checks for payments made by the association, purchase orders
approved by the association, credit card statements for credit cards issued in the name of the association,
statements for services rendered, and reimbursement requests submitted to the association, provided that the
person submitting the reimbursement request shall be solely responsible for removing all personal identification
information from the request.
(b)(1) The association shall
make available association records and enhanced association records for the time periods and within the
timeframes provided in subdivisions (i) and (j) for inspection and copying by a member of the association, or
the member's designated representative. The association may bill
the requesting member for the direct and actual cost of copying requested documents. The association shall inform the member of the amount of the copying costs
before copying the requested documents.
(2) A member of the
association may designate another person to inspect and copy the specified association records on the member's
behalf. The member shall make this designation in
writing.
(c)(1) The association shall
make the specified association records available for inspection and copying in the association's business office
within the common interest development.
(2) If the association does
not have a business office within the development, the association shall make the specified association records
available for inspection and copying at a place that the requesting member and the association agree
upon.
(3) If the association and
the requesting member cannot agree upon a place for inspection and copying pursuant to paragraph (2), or if the
requesting member submits a written request directly to the association for copies of specifically identified
records, the association may satisfy the requirement to make the association records available for inspection
and copying by mailing copies of the specifically identified records to the member by first-class mail within
the timeframes set forth in subdivision (j).
(4) The association may bill
the requesting member for the direct and actual cost of copying and mailing requested documents. The association shall inform the member of the amount of the copying and
mailing costs, and the member shall agree to pay those costs, before copying and sending the requested
documents.
(5) In addition to the
direct and actual costs of copying and mailing, the association may bill the requesting member an amount not in
excess of ten dollars ($10) per hour, and not to exceed two hundred dollars ($200) total per written request,
for the time actually and reasonably involved in redacting the enhanced association records as provided in
paragraph (2) of subdivision (a). The association shall inform the
member of the estimated costs, and the member shall agree to pay those costs, before retrieving the requested
documents.
(d)(1) Except as provided in
paragraph (2), the association may withhold or redact information from the association records for any of the
following reasons:
(A) The release of the
information is reasonably likely to lead to identity theft. For the
purposes of this section, "identity theft" means the unauthorized use of another person's personal identifying
information to obtain credit, goods, services, money, or property.
Examples of information that may be withheld or redacted pursuant to this paragraph include bank account numbers
of members or vendors, social security or tax identification numbers, and check, stock, and credit card
numbers.
(B) The release of the
information is reasonably likely to lead to fraud in connection with the association.
(C) The information is
privileged under law. Examples include documents subject to
attorney-client privilege or relating to litigation in which the association is or may become involved, and
confidential settlement agreements.
(D) The release of the
information is reasonably likely to compromise the privacy of an individual member of the
association.
(E) The information contains
any of the following:
(i) Records of a-la-carte
goods or services provided to individual members of the association for which the association received monetary
consideration other than assessments.
(ii) Records of disciplinary
actions, collection activities, or payment plans of members other than the member requesting the
records.
(iii) Any person's personal
identification information, including, without limitation, social security number, tax identification number,
driver's license number, credit card account numbers, bank account number, and bank routing
number.
(iv) Agendas, minutes, and
other information from executive sessions of the board of directors as described in Section 1363.05, except for
executed contracts not otherwise privileged. Privileged contracts
shall not include contracts for maintenance, management, or legal services.
(v) Personnel records other
than the payroll records required to be provided under paragraph (2).
(vi) Interior architectural
plans, including security features, for individual homes.
(2) Except as provided by
the attorney-client privilege, the association may not withhold or redact information concerning the
compensation paid to employees, vendors, or contractors.
Compensation information for individual employees shall be set forth by job classification or title, not by the
employee's name, social security number, or other personal information.
(3) No association, officer,
director, employee, agent or volunteer of an association shall be liable for damages to a member of the
association or any third party as the result of identity theft or other breach of privacy because of the failure
to withhold or redact that member's information under this subdivision unless the failure to withhold or redact
the information was intentional, willful, or negligent.
(4) If requested by the
requesting member, an association that denies or redacts records shall provide a written explanation specifying
the legal basis for withholding or redacting the requested records.
(e)(1) The association
records, and any information from them, may not be sold, used for a commercial purpose, or used for any other
purpose not reasonably related to a member's interest as a member.
An association may bring an action against any person who violates this section for injunctive relief and for
actual damages to the association caused by the violation.
(2) This section may not be
construed to limit the right of an association to damages for misuse of information obtained from the
association records pursuant to this section or to limit the right of an association to injunctive relief to
stop the misuse of this information.
(3) An association shall be
entitled to recover reasonable costs and expenses, including reasonable attorney's fees, in a successful action
to enforce its rights under this section.
(f) A member of an
association may bring an action to enforce the member's right to inspect and copy the association
records. If a court finds that the association unreasonably
withheld access to the association records, the court shall award the member reasonable costs and expenses,
including reasonable attorney's fees, and may assess a civil
penalty of up to five hundred dollars ($500) for the denial of each separate written request. A cause of action under this section may be brought in small claims court if
the amount of the demand does not exceed the jurisdiction of that court. A prevailing association may recover any costs if the court finds the action
to be frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation.
(g) The provisions of this
section apply to any community service organization or similar entity, as defined in paragraph (3) of
subdivision (c) of Section 1368, that is related to the association, and this section shall operate to give a
member of the community service organization or similar entity a right to inspect and copy the records of that
organization or entity equivalent to that granted to association members by this section.
(h) Requesting parties shall
have the option of receiving specifically identified records by electronic transmission or machine-readable
storage media as long as those records can be transmitted in a redacted format that does not allow the records
to be altered. The cost of duplication shall be limited to the
direct cost of producing the copy of a record in that electronic format. The association may deliver
specifically identified records by electronic transmission or machine-readable storage media as long as those
records can be transmitted in a redacted format that prevents the records from being altered.
(i) The time periods for
which specified records shall be provided is as follows:
(1) Association
records shall be made available for the current fiscal year and for each of the previous two fiscal
years.
(2) Minutes of member and
board meetings shall be permanently made available. If a committee has decisionmaking authority, minutes of the
meetings of that committee shall be made available commencing January 1, 2007, and shall thereafter be
permanently made available.
(j) The timeframes in which
access to specified records shall be provided to a requesting member are as follows:
(1) Association records
prepared during the current fiscal year, within 10 business days following the association's receipt of the
request.
(2) Association records
prepared during the previous two fiscal years, within 30 calendar days following the association's receipt of
the request.
(3) Any record or statement
available pursuant to Section 1365 or 1368, within the timeframe
specified therein.
(4) Minutes of member and
board meetings, within the timeframe specified in subdivision (d) of Section 1363.05.
(5) Minutes of meetings of
committees with decisionmaking authority for meetings commencing on or after January 1, 2007, within 15 calendar
days following approval.
(6) Membership list, within
the timeframe specified in Section 8330 of the Corporations Code.
(k) There shall be no
liability pursuant to this section for an association that fails to retain records for the periods specified in
subdivision (i) that were created prior to January 1, 2006.
(l) As applied to an
association and its members, the provisions of this section are intended to supersede the provisions of Sections
8330 and 8333 of the Corporations Code to the extent those
sections are inconsistent.
(m) The provisions of this
section shall not apply to any common interest development in which separate interests are being offered for
sale by a subdivider under the authority of a public report issued by the Department of Real Estate so long as
the subdivider or all subdividers offering those separate interests for sale, or any employees of those
subdividers or any other person who receives direct or indirect compensation from any of those subdividers,
comprise a majority of the members of the board of directors of the association. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
this section shall apply to that common interest development no later than 10 years after the close of escrow
for the first sale of a separate interest to a member of the general public pursuant to the public report issued
for the first phase of the development.
(n) This section shall
become operative on July 1, 2006.
§1365
.2.5
(a) The disclosures required by this article with regard to an association or
a property shall be summarized on the following form:
Assessment and
Reserve Funding Disclosure Summary
(1) The current regular
assessment per ownership interest is $_____ per ____. Note: If
assessments vary by the size or type of ownership interest, the assessment applicable to this ownership interest
may be found on page _____ of the attached summary.
(2) Additional regular or special assessments that have already been
scheduled to be imposed or charged, regardless of the purpose, if they have been approved by the board and/or
members:
+---------------+----------------+-----------------+
|
| Amount per |
|
|
| ownership |
|
|
| interest per
|
|
|
| month or year |
|
|
| (If assessments|
|
|
| are variable, |
|
|
| see note |
|
| Date |
|
|
| assessment | immediately
| Purpose of the |
| will be due: |
below): | assessment:
|
+---------------+----------------+-----------------+
|
|
|
|
+---------------+----------------+-----------------+
|
|
|
|
+---------------+----------------+-----------------+
|
|
|
|
+---------------+----------------+-----------------+
|
|Total:
|
|
+---------------+----------------+-----------------+
Note: If assessments vary by the
size or type of ownership interest, the assessment applicable to this ownership interest may be found on page
____ of the attached report.
(3) Based upon the most recent
reserve study and other information available to the board of directors, will currently projected reserve
account balances be sufficient at the end of each year to meet the association's obligation for repair and/or
replacement of major components during the next 30 years?
Yes _____ No _____
(4) If the answer to (3) is no, what additional assessments or other
contributions to reserves would be necessary to ensure that sufficient reserve funds will be available each year
during the next 30 years that have not yet been approved by the board or the members?
+------------------+-------------+
|
| Amount per |
| Approximate date
| ownership
|
| assessment |
interest |
|
| per month or|
| will be due:
| year: |
+------------------+-------------+
|
|
|
+------------------+-------------+
|
|
|
+------------------+-------------+
|
|
|
+------------------+-------------+
|
| |
+------------------+-------------+
|
|Total: |
+------------------+-------------+
(5) All major components are included in the reserve study and are included
in its calculations.
(6) Based on the method of calculation in paragraph (4) of subdivision
(b) of Section 1365.2.5, the estimated amount required in the
reserve fund at the end of the current fiscal year is $____, based in whole or in part on the last reserve study
or update prepared by ____ as of ____ (month), ____ (year). The
projected reserve fund cash balance at the end of the current fiscal year is $____, resulting in reserves being
____ percent funded at this date. If an alternate, but generally
accepted, method of calculation is also used, the required reserve amount is $____. (See attached explanation)
(7) Based on the method of
calculation in paragraph (4) of subdivision (b) of Section 1365.2.5 of the Civil Code, the
estimated amount required in the reserve fund at the end of each of the next five budget years is $______, and
the projected reserve fund cash balance in each of those years, taking into account only assessments already
approved and other known revenues, is $______, leaving the reserve at ______ percent funding. If the reserve funding plan approved by the association is implemented,
the projected reserve fund cash balance in each of those years will be $______, leaving the reserve at ______
percent funding.
Note: The
financial representations set forth in this summary are based on the best estimates of the preparer at that
time. The estimates are subject to change. At the time this summary
was prepared, the assumed long-term before-tax interest rate earned on reserve funds was ____ percent per year,
and the assumed long-term inflation rate to be applied to major component repair and replacement costs was ____
percent per year.
(b) For the purposes of preparing a summary pursuant to this
section:
(1) "Estimated remaining useful life" means the time reasonably
calculated to remain before a major component will require replacement.
(2) "Major component" has the meaning used in Section 1365.5. Components with an
estimated remaining useful life of more than 30 years may be included in a study as a capital asset or
disregarded from the reserve calculation, so long as the decision is revealed in the reserve study report and
reported in the Assessment and Reserve Funding Disclosure Summary.
(3) The form set out in subdivision (a) shall accompany each pro forma
operating budget or summary thereof that is delivered pursuant to this article. The form may be supplemented or modified to clarify the information delivered,
so long as the minimum information set out in subdivision (a) is provided.
(4) For the purpose of the report and summary, the amount of reserves
needed to be accumulated for a component at a given time shall be computed as the current cost of replacement or
repair multiplied by the number of years the component has been in service divided by the useful life of the
component. This shall not be construed to require the board to fund
reserves in accordance with this calculation.
§1365
.3
Unless the governing documents impose more stringent standards, any
community service organization as defined in paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 1368 whose funding from
the association or its members exceeds 10 percent of the organization's annual budget shall prepare and
distribute to the association a report that meets the requirements of Section 5012 of the Corporations
Code, and that describes in detail administrative costs and
identifies the payees of those costs in a manner consistent with the provisions of Section 1365.2. If the community
service organization does not comply with the standards, the report shall disclose the noncompliance in
detail. If a community service organization is responsible for the
maintenance of major components for which an association would otherwise be responsible, the community service
organization shall supply to the association the information regarding those components that the association
would use to complete disclosures and reserve reports required under this article. An association may rely upon information received from a community service
organization, and shall provide access to the information pursuant to the provisions of Section 1365.2.
§1365
.5
(a) Unless the governing documents impose more stringent standards, the board
of directors of the association shall do all of the following:
(1) Review a current
reconciliation of the association's operating accounts on at least a quarterly basis.
(2) Review a current
reconciliation of the association's reserve accounts on at least a quarterly basis.
(3) Review, on at least a
quarterly basis, the current year's actual reserve revenues and expenses compared to the current year's
budget.
(4) Review the latest
account statements prepared by the financial institutions where the association has its operating and reserve
accounts.
(5) Review an income and
expense statement for the association's operating and reserve accounts on at least a quarterly
basis.
(b) The signatures of at
least two persons, who shall be members of the association's board of directors, or one officer who is not a
member of the board of directors and a member of the board of directors, shall be required for the withdrawal of
moneys from the association's reserve accounts.
(c)(1) The board of
directors shall not expend funds designated as reserve funds for any purpose other than the repair, restoration,
replacement, or maintenance of, or litigation involving the repair, restoration, replacement, or maintenance of,
major components that the association is obligated to repair, restore, replace, or maintain and for which the
reserve fund was established.
(2) However, the board may
authorize the temporary transfer of moneys from a reserve fund to the association's general operating fund to
meet short-term cashflow requirements or other expenses, if the board has provided notice of the intent to
consider the transfer in a notice of meeting, which shall be provided as specified in Section
1363.05. The notice shall include the reasons the transfer is
needed, some of the options for repayment, and whether a special assessment may be considered. If the board authorizes the transfer, the board shall issue a written finding,
recorded in the board's minutes, explaining the reasons that the transfer is needed, and describing when and how
the moneys will be repaid to the reserve fund. The transferred
funds shall be restored to the reserve fund within one year of the date of the initial transfer, except that the
board may, after giving the same notice required for considering a transfer, and, upon making a finding
supported by documentation that a temporary delay would be in the best interests of the common interest
development, temporarily delay the restoration. The board shall
exercise prudent fiscal management in maintaining the integrity of the reserve account, and shall, if necessary,
levy a special assessment to recover the full amount of the expended funds within the time limits required by
this section. This special assessment is subject to the limitation
imposed by Section 1366. The board may, at its discretion, extend
the date the payment on the special assessment is due. Any
extension shall not prevent the board from pursuing any legal remedy to enforce the collection of an unpaid
special assessment.
(d) When the decision is
made to use reserve funds or to temporarily transfer moneys from the reserve fund to pay for litigation, the
association shall notify the members of the association of that decision in the next available mailing to all
members pursuant to Section 5016 of the Corporations Code, and
of the availability of an accounting of those expenses. Unless the
governing documents impose more stringent standards, the association shall make an accounting of expenses
related to the litigation on at least a quarterly basis. The
accounting shall be made available for inspection by members of the association at the association's
office.
(e) At least once every
three years, the board of directors shall cause to be conducted a reasonably competent and diligent visual
inspection of the accessible areas of the major components that the association is obligated to repair, replace,
restore, or maintain as part of a study of the reserve account requirements of the common interest development,
if the current replacement value of the major components is equal to or greater than one-half of the gross
budget of the association, excluding the association's reserve account for that period. The board shall review
this study, or cause it to be reviewed, annually and shall consider and implement necessary adjustments to the
board's analysis of the reserve account requirements as a result of that review.
The study required by this subdivision shall at a minimum
include:
(1) Identification of the
major components that the association is obligated to repair, replace, restore, or maintain that, as of the date
of the study, have a remaining useful life of less than 30 years.
(2) Identification of the
probable remaining useful life of the components identified in paragraph (1) as of the date of the
study.
(3) An estimate of the cost
of repair, replacement, restoration, or maintenance of the components identified in paragraph
(1).
(4) An estimate of the total
annual contribution necessary to defray the cost to repair, replace, restore, or maintain the components
identified in paragraph (1) during and at the end of their useful life, after subtracting total reserve funds as
of the date of the study.
(5) A reserve funding plan
that indicates how the association plans to fund the contribution identified in paragraph (4) to meet the
association's obligation for the repair and replacement of all major components with an expected remaining life
of 30 years or less, not including those components that the board has determined will not be replaced or
repaired. The plan shall include a schedule of the date and amount
of any change in regular or special assessments that would be needed to sufficiently fund the reserve funding
plan. The plan shall be adopted by the board of directors at an
open meeting before the membership of the association as described in Section 1363.05. If the board of directors determines that an assessment increase is necessary
to fund the reserve funding plan, any increase shall be approved in a separate action of the board that is
consistent with the procedure described in Section 1366.
(f) As used in this section, "reserve accounts" means both of the
following:
(1) Moneys that the
association's board of directors has identified for use to defray the future repair or replacement of, or
additions to, those major components that the association is obligated to maintain.
(2) The funds received, and
not yet expended or disposed of, from either a compensatory damage award or settlement to an association from
any person or entity for injuries to property, real or personal, arising from any construction or design
defects. These funds shall be separately itemized from funds
described in paragraph (1).
(g) As used in this section, "reserve account requirements" means the estimated
funds that the association's board of directors has determined are required to be available at a specified point
in time to repair, replace, or restore those major components that the association is obligated to
maintain.
(h) This section does not apply to an association that does not have a "common
area" as defined in Section 1351.
§1365
.6
Notwithstanding any other law, and regardless of whether an association is a
corporation, as defined in Section 162 of the Corporations Code,
the provisions of Section 310 of the Corporations Code shall
apply to any contract or other transaction authorized, approved, or ratified by the board or a committee of the
board.
§1365
.7
(a) A volunteer officer or volunteer director of an association, as
defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1351, which manages a common interest development that is exclusively
residential, shall not be personally liable in excess of the coverage of insurance specified in paragraph (4) to
any person who suffers injury, including, but not limited to, bodily injury, emotional distress, wrongful death,
or property damage or loss as a result of the tortious act or omission of the volunteer officer or volunteer
director if all of the following criteria are met:
(1) The act or omission was
performed within the scope of the officer's or director's association duties.
(2) The act or omission was
performed in good faith.
(3) The act or omission was
not willful, wanton, or grossly negligent.
(4) The association
maintained and had in effect at the time the act or omission occurred and at the time a claim is made one or
more policies of insurance which shall include coverage for (A) general liability of the association and (B)
individual liability of officers and directors of the association for negligent acts or omissions in that
capacity; provided, that both types of coverage are in the following minimum amount:
(A) At least five hundred
thousand dollars ($500,000) if the common interest development consists of 100 or fewer separate
interests.
(B) At least one million
dollars ($1,000,000) if the common interest development consists of more than 100 separate
interests.
(b) The payment of actual
expenses incurred by a director or officer in the execution of the duties of that position does not affect the
director's or officer's status as a volunteer within the meaning of this section.
(c) An officer or director
who at the time of the act or omission was a declarant, as defined in subdivision (g) of Section 1351, or who
received either direct or indirect compensation as an employee from the declarant, or from a financial
institution that purchased a separate interest, as defined in subdivision (l) of Section 1351, at a judicial or
nonjudicial foreclosure of a mortgage or deed of trust on real property, is not a volunteer for the purposes of
this section.
(d) Nothing in this section
shall be construed to limit the liability of the association for its negligent act or omission or for any
negligent act or omission of an officer or director of the association.
(e) This section shall only
apply to a volunteer officer or director who is a tenant of a separate interest in the common interest
development or is an owner of no more than two separate interests in the common interest
development.
(f)(1) For purposes of
paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), the scope of the officer's or director's association duties shall include, but
shall not be limited to, both of the following decisions:
(A) Whether to conduct an
investigation of the common interest development for latent deficiencies prior to the expiration of the
applicable statute of limitations.
(B) Whether to commence a
civil action against the builder for defects in design or
construction.
(2) It is the intent of the
Legislature that this section clarify the scope of association duties to which the protections against personal
liability in this section apply. It is not the intent of the
Legislature that these clarifications be construed to expand, or limit, the fiduciary duties owed by the
directors or officers.
§1365
.9
(a) It is the intent of the Legislature to offer civil liability protection to owners of the separate interests in a common
interest development that have common areas owned in tenancy-in-common if the association carries a certain
level of prescribed insurance that covers a cause of action in tort.
(b) Any cause of action in
tort against any owner of a separate interest arising solely by reason of an ownership interest as a tenant in
common in the common area of a common interest development shall be brought only against the association and not
against the individual owners of the separate interests, as defined in subdivision (l) of Section
1351, if both of the insurance requirements in paragraphs (1) and
(2) are met:
(1) The association
maintained and has in effect for this cause of action, one or more policies of insurance which include coverage
for general liability of the association.
(2) The coverage described
in paragraph (1) is in the following minimum amounts:
(A) At least two million
dollars ($2,000,000) if the common interest development consists of 100 or fewer separate
interests.
(B) At least three million
dollars ($3,000,000) if the common interest development consists of more than 100 separate
interests.
§1366
(a) Except as provided in this section, the association shall levy regular
and special assessments sufficient to perform its obligations under the governing documents and this
title. However, annual increases in regular assessments for any
fiscal year, as authorized by subdivision (b), shall not be imposed unless the board has complied with
subdivision (a) of Section 1365 with respect to that fiscal year, or has obtained the approval of owners,
constituting a quorum, casting a majority of the votes at a meeting or election of the association conducted in
accordance with Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 7510) of Part 3 of Division 2 of Title 1 of the Corporations
Code and Section 7613 of the Corporations Code.
For the
purposes of this section, "quorum" means more than 50 percent of the owners of an association.
(b) Notwithstanding more
restrictive limitations placed on the board by the governing documents, the board of directors may not impose a
regular assessment that is more than 20 percent greater than the regular assessment for the association's
preceding fiscal year or impose special assessments which in the aggregate exceed 5 percent of the budgeted
gross expenses of the association for that fiscal year without the approval of owners, constituting a quorum,
casting a majority of the votes at a meeting or election of the association conducted in accordance with Chapter
5 (commencing with Section 7510) of Part 3 of Division 2 of Title 1 of the Corporations Code and Section 7613 of the Corporations Code. For the purposes of this
section, quorum means more than 50 percent of the owners of an association. This section does not limit assessment increases necessary for emergency
situations. For purposes of this section, an emergency situation is
any one of the following:
(1) An extraordinary expense
required by an order of a court.
(2) An extraordinary expense
necessary to repair or maintain the common interest development or any part of it for which the association is
responsible where a threat to personal safety on the property is discovered.
(3) An extraordinary expense
necessary to repair or maintain the common interest development or any part of it for which the association is
responsible that could not have been reasonably foreseen by the board in preparing and distributing the pro
forma operating budget under Section 1365. However, prior to the
imposition or collection of an assessment under this subdivision, the board shall pass a resolution containing
written findings as to the necessity of the extraordinary expense involved and why the expense was not or could
not have been reasonably foreseen in the budgeting process, and the resolution shall be distributed to the
members with the notice of assessment.
(c) Regular assessments
imposed or collected to perform the obligations of an association under the governing documents or this title
shall be exempt from execution by a judgment creditor of the association only to the extent necessary for the
association to perform essential services, such as paying for utilities and insurance. In determining the appropriateness of an exemption, a court shall ensure that
only essential services are protected under this subdivision.
This exemption shall not apply to any consensual pledges, liens, or
encumbrances that have been approved by the owners of an association, constituting a quorum, casting a majority
of the votes at a meeting or election of the association, or to any state tax lien, or to any lien for labor or
materials supplied to the common area.
(d) The association shall
provide notice by first-class mail to the owners of the separate interests of any increase in the regular or
special assessments of the association, not less than 30 nor more than 60 days prior to the increased assessment
becoming due.
(e) Regular and special
assessments levied pursuant to the governing documents are delinquent 15 days after they become due, unless the
declaration provides a longer time period, in which case the longer time period shall apply. If an assessment is delinquent the association may recover all of the
following:
(1) Reasonable costs
incurred in collecting the delinquent assessment, including reasonable attorney's fees.
(2) A late charge not
exceeding 10 percent of the delinquent assessment or ten dollars ($10), whichever is greater, unless the
declaration specifies a late charge in a smaller amount, in which case any late charge imposed shall not exceed
the amount specified in the declaration.
(3) Interest on all sums
imposed in accordance with this section, including the delinquent assessments, reasonable fees and costs of
collection, and reasonable attorney's fees, at an annual interest rate not to exceed 12 percent, commencing 30
days after the assessment becomes due, unless the declaration specifies the recovery of interest at a rate of a
lesser amount, in which case the lesser rate of interest shall apply.
(f) Associations are hereby
exempted from interest-rate limitations imposed by Article XV of the California Constitution, subject to the
limitations of this section.
§1366
.1
An
association shall not impose or collect an assessment or fee that exceeds the amount necessary to defray the
costs for which it is levied.
§1366
.2
(a) In order to facilitate the collection of regular assessments, special
assessments, transfer fees, and similar charges, the board of directors of any association is authorized to
record a statement or amended statement identifying relevant information for the association. This statement may include any or all of the following
information:
(1) The name of the
association as shown in the conditions, covenants, and restrictions or the current name of the association, if
different.
(2) The name and address of
a managing agent or treasurer of the association or other individual or entity authorized to receive assessments
and fees imposed by the association.
(3) A daytime telephone
number of the authorized party identified in paragraph (2) if a telephone number is available.
(4) A list of separate
interests subject to assessment by the association, showing the assessor's parcel number or legal description,
or both, of the separate interests.
(5) The recording
information identifying the declaration or declarations of covenants, conditions, and restrictions governing the
association.
(6) If an amended statement
is being recorded, the recording information identifying the prior statement or statements which the amendment
is superseding.
(b) The county recorder is
authorized to charge a fee for recording the document described in subdivision (a), which fee shall be based
upon the number of pages in the document and the recorder's per-page recording fee.
§1366.4
(a) Except as
provided in subdivision (b), notwithstanding any provision of this title or the governing documents to the
contrary, an association shall not levy assessments on separate interests within the common interest development
based on the taxable value of the separate interests unless the association, on or before December 31, 2009, in
accordance with its governing documents, levied assessments on those separate interests based on their taxable
value, as determined by the tax assessor of the county in which the separate interests are
located.
(b) An association that is
responsible for paying taxes on the separate interests within the common interest development may levy that
portion of assessments on separate interests that is related to the payment of taxes based on the taxable value
of the separate interest, as determined by the tax assessor.
§1367
(a) A regular or special assessment and any late charges, reasonable costs of
collection, and interest, as assessed in accordance with Section 1366, shall be a debt of the owner of the separate interest at the time the
assessment or other sums are levied. Before an association may
place a lien upon the separate interest of an owner to collect a debt which is past due under this subdivision,
the association shall notify the owner in writing by certified mail of the fee and penalty procedures of the
association, provide an itemized statement of the charges owed by the owner, including items on the statement
which indicate the assessments owed, any late charges and the method of calculation, any attorney's fees, and
the collection practices used by the association, including the right of the association to the reasonable costs
of collection. In addition, any payments toward that debt shall
first be applied to the assessments owed, and only after the principal owed is paid in full shall the payments
be applied to interest or collection expenses.
(b) The amount of the
assessment, plus any costs of collection, late charges, and interest assessed in accordance with Section
1366, shall be a lien on the owner's interest in the common
interest development from and after the time the association causes to be recorded with the county recorder of
the county in which the separate interest is located, a notice of delinquent assessment, which shall state the
amount of the assessment and other sums imposed in accordance with Section 1366, a legal description of the owner's interest in the common interest
development against which the assessment and other sums are levied, the name of the record owner of the owner's
interest in the common interest development against which the lien is imposed, and, in order for the lien to be
enforced by nonjudicial foreclosure as provided in subdivision (e)
the name and address of the trustee authorized by the association to enforce the lien by sale. The notice of delinquent assessment shall be signed by the person designated
in the declaration or by the association for that purpose, or if no one is designated, by the president of the
association, and mailed in the manner set forth in Section 2924b, to all record owners of the owner's interest
in the common interest development no later than 10 calendar days after recordation. Upon payment of the sums specified in the notice of delinquent assessment, the
association shall cause to be recorded a further notice stating the satisfaction and release of the lien
thereof. A monetary penalty imposed by the association as a means
of reimbursing the association for costs incurred by the association in the repair of damage to common areas and
facilities for which the member or the member's guests or tenants were responsible may become a lien against the
member's separate interest enforceable by the sale of the interest under Sections 2924, 2924b, and 2924c,
provided the authority to impose a lien is set forth in the governing documents. It is the intent of the Legislature not to contravene Section 2792.26 of Title
10 of the California Code of Regulations, as that section
appeared on January 1, 1996, for associations of subdivisions that are being sold under authority of a
subdivision public report, pursuant to Part 2 (commencing with Section 11000) of Division 4 of the Business and
Professions Code.
(c) Except as indicated in
subdivision (b), a monetary penalty imposed by the association as a disciplinary measure for failure of a member
to comply with the governing instruments, except for the late payments, may not be characterized nor treated in
the governing instruments as an assessment which may become a lien against the member's subdivision interest
enforceable by the sale of the interest under Sections 2924, 2924b, and 2924c.
(d) A lien created pursuant
to subdivision (b) shall be prior to all other liens recorded subsequent to the notice of assessment, except
that the declaration may provide for the subordination thereof to any other liens and
encumbrances.
(e) After the expiration of
30 days following the recording of a lien created pursuant to subdivision (b), the lien may be enforced in any
manner permitted by law, including sale by the court, sale by the trustee designated in the notice of delinquent
assessment, or sale by a trustee substituted pursuant to Section 2934a. Any sale by the trustee shall be conducted in accordance with the provisions
of Sections 2924, 2924b, and 2924c applicable to the exercise of powers of sale in mortgages and deeds of
trusts.
(f) Nothing in this section
or in subdivision (a) of Section 726 of the Code of
Civil Procedure prohibits actions against the owner of a
separate interest to recover sums for which a lien is created pursuant to this section or prohibits an
association from taking a deed in lieu of foreclosure.
(g) This section only
applies to liens recorded on or after January 1, 1986 and prior to January 1, 2003.
§1367.1
(a) A regular or special assessment and any late charges, reasonable fees and
costs of collection, reasonable attorney's fees, if any, and interest, if any, as determined in accordance with
Section 1366, shall be a debt of the owner of the separate
interest at the time the assessment or other sums are levied. At
least 30 days prior to recording a lien upon the separate interest of the owner of record to collect a debt that
is past due under this subdivision, the association shall notify the owner of record in writing by certified
mail of the following:
(1) A general description of
the collection and lien enforcement procedures of the association and the method of calculation of the amount, a
statement that the owner of the separate interest has the right to inspect the association records, pursuant to
Section 8333 of the Corporations Code, and the following
statement in 14-point boldface type, if printed, or in capital letters, if typed:
"IMPORTANT
NOTICE: IF YOUR SEPARATE INTEREST IS PLACED IN FORECLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR ASSESSMENTS, IT MAY BE
SOLD WITHOUT COURT ACTION."
(2) An itemized statement of
the charges owed by the owner, including items on the statement which indicate the amount of any delinquent
assessments, the fees and reasonable costs of collection, reasonable attorney's fees, any late charges, and
interest, if any.
(3) A statement that the
owner shall not be liable to pay the charges, interest, and costs of collection, if it is determined the
assessment was paid on time to the association.
(4) The right to request a
meeting with the board as provided by paragraph (3) of subdivision (c).
(5) The right to dispute the
assessment debt by submitting a written request for dispute resolution to the association pursuant to the
association's "meet and confer" program required in Article 5 (commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter
4.
(6) The right to request
alternative dispute resolution with a neutral third party pursuant to Article 2 (commencing with Section
1369.510) of Chapter 7 before the association may initiate foreclosure against the owner's separate interest,
except that binding arbitration shall not be available if the association intends to initiate a judicial
foreclosure.
(b) Any payments
made by the owner of a separate interest toward the debt set forth, as required in subdivision (a), shall first
be applied to the assessments owed, and, only after the assessments owed are paid in full shall the payments be
applied to the fees and costs of collection, attorney's fees, late charges, or interest. When an owner makes a payment, the owner may request a receipt and the
association shall provide it. The receipt shall indicate the date
of payment and the person who received it. The association shall
provide a mailing address for overnight payment of assessments.
(c)(1)(A) Prior to recording
a lien for delinquent assessments, an association shall offer the owner and, if so requested by the owner,
participate in dispute resolution pursuant to the association' s "meet and confer" program required in Article 5
(commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter 4.
(B) Prior to initiating a
foreclosure for delinquent assessments, an association shall offer the owner and, if so requested by the owner,
shall participate in dispute resolution pursuant to the association's "meet and confer" program required in
Article 5 (commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter 4 or alternative dispute resolution with a neutral third
party pursuant to Article 2 (commencing with Section 1369.510) of Chapter 7. The decision to pursue dispute resolution or a particular type of alternative
dispute resolution shall be the choice of the owner, except that binding arbitration shall not be available if
the association intends to initiate a judicial foreclosure.
(2) For liens recorded on or
after January 1, 2006, the decision to record a lien for delinquent assessments shall be made only by the board
of directors of the association and may not be delegated to an agent of the association. The board shall approve the decision by a majority vote of the board members
in an open meeting. The board shall record the vote in the minutes
of that meeting.
(3) An owner, other than an
owner of any interest that is described in Section 11212 of the Business and Professions Code that is not otherwise exempt from this section pursuant to subdivision
(a) of Section 11211.7, may submit a written request to meet with the board to discuss a payment plan for the
debt noticed pursuant to subdivision (a). The association shall
provide the owners the standards for payment plans, if any exist.
The board shall meet with the owner in executive session within 45 days of the postmark of the request, if the
request is mailed within 15 days of the date of the postmark of the notice, unless there is no regularly
scheduled board meeting within that period, in which case the board may designate a committee of one or more
members to meet with the owner. Payment plans may incorporate any
assessments that accrue during the payment plan period. Payment
plans shall not impede an association's ability to record a lien on the owner's separate interest to secure
payment of delinquent assessments. Additional late fees shall not
accrue during the payment plan period if the owner is in compliance with the terms of the payment
plan. In the event of a default on any payment plan, the
association may resume its efforts to collect the delinquent assessments from the time prior to entering into
the payment plan.
(d) The amount of the
assessment, plus any costs of collection, late charges, and interest assessed in accordance with Section
1366, shall be a lien on the owner's separate interest in the
common interest development from and after the time the association causes to be recorded with the county
recorder of the county in which the separate interest is located, a notice of delinquent assessment, which shall
state the amount of the assessment and other sums imposed in accordance with Section 1366, a legal description of the owner's separate interest in the common
interest development against which the assessment and other sums are levied, and the name of the record owner of
the separate interest in the common interest development against which the lien is imposed. The itemized
statement of the charges owed by the owner described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) shall be recorded
together with the notice of delinquent assessment. In order for the
lien to be enforced by nonjudicial foreclosure as provided in subdivision (g), the notice of delinquent
assessment shall state the name and address of the trustee authorized by the association to enforce the lien by
sale. The notice of delinquent assessment shall be signed by the
person designated in the declaration or by the association for that purpose, or if no one is designated, by the
president of the association. A copy of the recorded notice of
delinquent assessment shall be mailed by certified mail to every person whose name is shown as an owner of the
separate interest in the association's records, and the notice shall be mailed no later than 10 calendar days
after recordation. Within 21 days of the payment of the sums
specified in the notice of delinquent assessment, the association shall record or cause to be recorded in the
office of the county recorder in which the notice of delinquent assessment is recorded a lien release or notice
of rescission and provide the owner of the separate interest a copy of the lien release or notice that the
delinquent assessment has been satisfied. A monetary charge imposed
by the association as a means of reimbursing the association for costs incurred by the association in the repair
of damage to common areas and facilities for which the member or the member's guests or tenants were responsible
may become a lien against the member's separate interest enforceable by the sale of the interest under Sections
2924, 2924b, and 2924c, provided the authority to impose a lien is set forth in the governing
documents. It is the intent of the Legislature not to contravene
Section 2792.26 of Title 10 of the California Code of
Regulations, as that section appeared on January 1, 1996, for associations of subdivisions that are being sold
under authority of a subdivision public report, pursuant to Part 2 (commencing with Section 11000) of Division 4
of the Business and Professions Code.
(e) Except as indicated in
subdivision (d), a monetary penalty imposed by the association as a disciplinary measure for failure of a member
to comply with the governing instruments, except for the late payments, may not be characterized nor treated in
the governing instruments as an assessment that may become a lien against the member's subdivision separate
interest enforceable by the sale of the interest under Sections 2924, 2924b, and 2924c.
(f) A lien created
pursuant to subdivision (d) shall be prior to all other liens recorded subsequent to the notice of assessment,
except that the declaration may provide for the subordination thereof to any other liens and
encumbrances.
(g) An association may not
voluntarily assign or pledge the association's right to collect payments or assessments, or to enforce or
foreclose a lien to a third party, except when the assignment or pledge is made to a financial institution or
lender chartered or licensed under federal or state law, when acting within the scope of that charter or
license, as security for a loan obtained by the association; however, the foregoing provision may not restrict
the right or ability of an association to assign any unpaid obligations of a former member to a third party for
purposes of collection. Subject to the limitations of this subdivision, after the expiration of 30 days
following the recording of a lien created pursuant to subdivision (d), the lien may be enforced in any manner
permitted by law, including sale by the court, sale by the trustee designated in the notice of delinquent
assessment, or sale by a trustee substituted pursuant to Section 2934a. Any sale by the trustee shall be conducted in accordance with Sections 2924,
2924b, and 2924c applicable to the exercise of powers of sale in mortgages and deeds of trust. The fees of a trustee may not exceed the amounts prescribed in Sections 2924c
and 2924d, plus the cost of service for either of the following:
(1) The notice of default pursuant to subdivision (j) of Section
1367.1.
(2) The decision of the
board to foreclose upon the separate interest of an owner as described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of
Section 1367.4.
(h) Nothing in this section
or in subdivision (a) of Section 726 of the Code of
Civil Procedure prohibits actions against the owner of a
separate interest to recover sums for which a lien is created pursuant to this section or prohibits an
association from taking a deed in lieu of foreclosure.
(i) If it is determined that
a lien previously recorded against the separate interest was recorded in error, the party who recorded the lien
shall, within 21 calendar days, record or cause to be recorded in the office of the county recorder in which the
notice of delinquent assessment is recorded a lien release or notice of rescission and provide the owner of the
separate interest with a declaration that the lien filing or recording was in error and a copy of the lien
release or notice of rescission.
(j) In addition to the
requirements of Section 2924, a notice of default shall be served by the association on the owner's legal
representative in accordance with the manner of service of summons in Article 3 (commencing with Section 415.10)
of Chapter 4 of Title 5 of Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The owner's
legal representative shall be the person whose name is shown as the owner of a separate interest in the
association's records, unless another person has been previously designated by the owner as his or her legal
representative in writing and mailed to the association in a manner that indicates that the association has
received it.
(k) Upon receipt of a
written request by an owner identifying a secondary address for purposes of collection notices, the association
shall send additional copies of any notices required by this section to the secondary address
provided. The association shall notify owners of their right to
submit secondary addresses to the association, at the time the association issues the pro forma operating budget
pursuant to Section 1365. The owner's request shall be in writing
and shall be mailed to the association in a manner that shall indicate the association has received
it. The owner may identify or change a secondary address at any
time, provided that, if a secondary address is identified or changed during the collection process, the
association shall only be required to send notices to the indicated secondary address from the point the
association receives the request.
(l)(1) An association that
fails to comply with the procedures set forth in this section shall, prior to recording a lien, recommence the
required notice process.
(2) Any costs associated
with recommencing the notice process shall be borne by the association and not by the owner of a separate
interest.
(m) This section only
applies to liens recorded on or after January 1, 2003.
(n) This section is
subordinate to, and shall be interpreted in conformity with, Section 1367.4.
§1367.4
(a) Notwithstanding any law or any provisions of the governing documents to
the contrary, this section shall apply to debts for assessments that arise on and after January 1,
2006.
(b) An association that
seeks to collect delinquent regular or special assessments of an amount less than one thousand eight hundred
dollars ($1,800), not including any accelerated assessments, late charges, fees and costs of collection,
attorney's fees, or interest, may not collect that debt through judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure, but may
attempt to collect or secure that debt in any of the following ways:
(1) By a civil action in small claims court, pursuant to Chapter 5.5 (commencing with
Section 116.110) of Title 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure. An association
that chooses to proceed by an action in small claims court, and prevails, may enforce the judgment as permitted
under Article 8 (commencing with Section 116.810) of Title 1 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The amount that may be recovered in small claims court
to collect upon a debt for delinquent assessments
may not exceed
the jurisdictional limits of the small claims court and shall be the sum of the following:
(A) The amount owed as of
the date of filing the complaint in the small claims court proceeding.
(B) In the discretion of the
court, an additional amount to that described in subparagraph (A) equal to the amount owed for the period from
the date the complaint is filed until satisfaction of the judgment, which total amount may include accruing
unpaid assessments and any reasonable late charges, fees and costs of collection, attorney's fees, and interest,
up to the jurisdictional limits of the small claims court.
(2) By recording a lien on
the owner's separate interest upon which the association may not foreclose until the amount of the delinquent
assessments secured by the lien, exclusive of any accelerated assessments, late charges, fees and costs of
collection, attorney's fees, or interest, equals or exceeds one thousand eight hundred dollars ($1,800) or the
assessments secured by the lien are more than 12 months delinquent.
An association that chooses to record a lien under these provisions, prior to recording the lien, shall offer
the owner and, if so requested by the owner, participate in dispute resolution as set forth in Article 5
(commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter 4.
(3) Any other manner
provided by law, except for judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure.
(c) An association that
seeks to collect delinquent regular or special assessments of an amount of one thousand eight hundred dollars
($1,800) or more, not including any accelerated assessments, late charges, fees and costs of collection,
attorney's fees, or interest, or any assessments secured by the lien that are more than 12 months delinquent,
may use judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure subject to the following conditions:
(1) Prior to initiating a
foreclosure on an owner's separate interest, the association shall offer the owner and, if so requested by the
owner, participate in dispute resolution pursuant to the association's "meet and confer" program required in
Article 5 (commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter 4 or alternative dispute resolution as set forth in
Article 2 (commencing with Section 1369.510) of Chapter 7. The
decision to pursue dispute resolution or a particular type of alternative dispute resolution shall be the choice
of the owner, except that binding arbitration shall not be available if the association intends to initiate a
judicial foreclosure.
(2) The decision to initiate
foreclosure of a lien for delinquent assessments that has been validly recorded shall be made only by the board
of directors of the association and may not be delegated to an agent of the association. The board shall approve the decision by a majority vote of the board members in
an executive session. The board shall record the vote in the
minutes of the next meeting of the board open to all members. The
board shall maintain the confidentiality of the owner or owners of the separate interest by identifying the
matter in the minutes by the parcel number of the property, rather than the name of the owner or
owners. A board vote to approve foreclosure of a lien shall take
place at least 30 days prior to any public sale.
(3) The board shall provide
notice by personal service in accordance with the manner of service of summons in Article 3 (commencing with
Section 415.10) of Chapter 4 of Title 5 of Part 2 of the Code of
Civil Procedure to an owner of a separate interest who occupies
the separate interest or to the owner's legal representative, if the board votes to foreclose upon the separate
interest. The board shall provide written notice to an owner of a
separate interest who does not occupy the separate interest by first-class mail, postage prepaid, at the most
current address shown on the books of the association. In the
absence of written notification by the owner to the association, the address of the owner's separate interest
may be treated as the owner's mailing address.
(4) A nonjudicial
foreclosure by an association to collect upon a debt for delinquent assessments shall be subject to a right of
redemption. The redemption period within which the separate interest may be redeemed from a foreclosure sale
under this paragraph ends 90 days after the sale. In addition to
the requirements of Section 2924f, a notice of sale in connection with an association's foreclosure of a
separate interest in a common interest development shall include a statement that the property is being sold
subject to the right of redemption created in this paragraph.
(d) The limitation on
foreclosure of assessment liens for amounts under the stated minimum in this section does not apply to
assessments owed by owners of separate interests in timeshare estates, as defined in subdivision (x) of Section
11112 of the Business and Professions Code, or to assessments
owed by developers.
§1367.5
If it is determined through dispute resolution pursuant to the association's
"meet and confer" program required in Article 5 (commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter 4 or alternative
dispute resolution with a neutral third party pursuant to Article 2 (commencing with Section 1369.510) of
Chapter 7 that an association has recorded a lien for a delinquent assessment in error, the association shall
promptly reverse all late charges, fees, interest, attorney's fees, costs of collection, costs imposed for the
notice prescribed in subdivision (a) of Section 1367.1, and costs of recordation and release of the lien
authorized under subdivision (b) of Section 1367.4, and pay all costs related to the dispute resolution or
alternative dispute resolution.
§1367.6
(a) If a dispute exists between the owner of a separate interest and the
association regarding any disputed charge or sum levied by the association, including, but not limited to, an
assessment, fine, penalty, late fee, collection cost, or monetary penalty imposed as a disciplinary measure, and
the amount in dispute does not exceed the jurisdictional limits stated in Sections 116.220 and 116.221 of the
Code of Civil
Procedure, the owner of the separate interest may, in addition to pursuing dispute resolution pursuant to
Article 5 (commencing with Section 1363.810) of Chapter 4, pay under protest the disputed amount and all other
amounts levied, including any fees and reasonable costs of collection, reasonable attorney's fees, late charges,
and interest, if any, pursuant to subdivision (e) of Section 1366, and commence an action in small claims court pursuant to Chapter 5.5
(commencing with Section 116.110) of Title 1 of the Code of
Civil Procedure.
(b) Nothing in this section
shall impede an association's ability to collect delinquent assessments as provided in Sections 1367.1 and
1367.4.
§1368
(a) The owner of a separate interest, other than an owner subject to the
requirements of Section 11018.6 of the Business and Professions Code, shall, as soon as practicable before transfer of title to the separate
interest or execution of a real property sales contract therefor, as defined in Section 2985, provide the
following to the prospective purchaser:
(1) A copy of the governing
documents of the common interest development, including any operating rules, and including a copy of the
association's articles of incorporation, or, if not incorporated, a statement in writing from an authorized
representative of the association that the association is not incorporated.
(2) If there is a
restriction in the governing documents limiting the occupancy, residency, or use of a separate interest on the
basis of age in a manner different from that provided in Section 51.3, a statement that the restriction is only
enforceable to the extent permitted by Section 51.3 and a statement specifying the applicable provisions of
Section 51.3.
(3) A copy of the most
recent documents distributed pursuant to Section 1365.
(4) A true statement in
writing obtained from an authorized representative of the association as to the amount of the association's
current regular and special assessments and fees, any assessments levied upon the owner's interest in the common
interest development that are unpaid on the date of the statement, and any monetary fines or penalties levied
upon the owner's interest and unpaid on the date of the statement.
The statement obtained from an authorized representative shall also include true information on late charges,
interest, and costs of collection which, as of the date of the statement, are or may be made a lien upon the
owner's interest in a common interest development pursuant to Section 1367 or 1367.1.
(5) A copy or a summary of
any notice previously sent to the owner pursuant to subdivision (h) of Section 1363 that sets forth any alleged
violation of the governing documents that remains unresolved at the time of the request. The notice shall not be deemed a waiver of the association's right to enforce
the governing documents against the owner or the prospective purchaser of the separate interest with respect to
any violation. This paragraph shall not be construed to require an
association to inspect an owner's separate interest.
(6) A copy of the
preliminary list of defects provided to each member of the association pursuant to Section 1375, unless the
association and the builder subsequently enter into a settlement agreement or otherwise resolve the matter and
the association complies with Section 1375.1. Disclosure of the
preliminary list of defects pursuant to this paragraph does not waive any privilege attached to the
document. The preliminary list of defects shall also include a
statement that a final determination as to whether the list of defects is accurate and complete has not been
made.
(7) A copy of the latest
information provided for in Section 1375.1.
(8) Any change in the
association's current regular and special assessments and fees which have been approved by the association's
board of directors, but have not become due and payable as of the date disclosure is provided pursuant to this
subdivision.
(b) Upon written request, an
association shall, within 10 days of the mailing or delivery of the request, provide the owner of a separate
interest with a copy of the requested items specified in paragraphs (1) to (8), inclusive, of subdivision
(a). The items required to be made available pursuant to this
section may be maintained in electronic form and requesting parties shall have the option of receiving them by
electronic transmission or machine readable storage media if the association maintains these items in electronic
form. The association may charge a reasonable fee for this service
based upon the association's actual cost to procure, prepare, and reproduce the requested
items.
(c)(1) Subject to the
provisions of paragraph (2), neither an association nor a community service organization or similar entity may
impose or collect any assessment, penalty, or fee in connection with a transfer of title or any other interest
except for the following:
(A) An amount not to exceed
the association's actual costs to change its records.
(B) An amount authorized by
subdivision (b).
(2) The amendments made to
this subdivision by the act adding this paragraph do not apply to a community service organization or similar
entity that is described in subparagraph (A) or (B):
(A) The community service
organization or similar entity satisfies both of the following requirements:
(i) The community service
organization or similar entity was established prior to February 20, 2003.
(ii) The community service
organization or similar entity exists and operates, in whole or in part, to fund or perform environmental
mitigation or to restore or maintain wetlands or native habitat, as required by the state or local government as
an express written condition of development.
(B) The community service
organization or similar entity satisfies all of the following requirements:
(i) The community service
organization or similar entity is not an organization or entity described in subparagraph (A).
(ii) The community service
organization or similar entity was established and received a transfer fee prior to January 1,
2004.
(iii) On and after January
1, 2006, the community service organization or similar entity offers a purchaser the following payment options
for the fee or charge it collects at time of transfer:
(I) Paying the fee or charge
at the time of transfer.
(II) Paying the fee or
charge pursuant to an installment payment plan for a period of not less than seven years. If the purchaser elects to pay the fee or charge in installment payments, the
community service organization or similar entity may also collect additional amounts that do not exceed the
actual costs for billing and financing on the amount owed. If the
purchaser sells the separate interest before the end of the installment payment plan period, he or she shall pay
the remaining balance prior to transfer.
(3) For the purposes of this
subdivision, a "community service organization or similar entity" means a nonprofit entity, other than an
association, that is organized to provide services to residents of the common interest development or to the
public in addition to the residents, to the extent community common areas or facilities are available to the
public. A "community service organization or similar entity" does not include an entity that has been organized
solely to raise moneys and contribute to other nonprofit organizations that are qualified as tax exempt under
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that provide
housing or housing assistance.
(d) Any person or entity who
willfully violates this section is liable to the purchaser of a separate interest that is subject to this
section for actual damages occasioned thereby and, in addition, shall pay a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed five hundred dollars
($500). In an action to enforce this liability, the prevailing
party shall be awarded reasonable attorneys' fees.
(e) Nothing in this section
affects the validity of title to real property transferred in violation of this section.
(f) In addition to the
requirements of this section, an owner transferring title to a separate interest shall comply with applicable
requirements of Sections 1133 and 1134.
(g) For the purposes of this
section, a person who acts as a community association manager is an agent, as defined in Section 2297, of the
association.
§1368
.1
(a) Any rule or regulation of an association that arbitrarily or unreasonably
restricts an owner's ability to market his or her interest in a common interest development is
void.
(b) No association
may adopt, enforce, or otherwise impose any rule or regulation that does either of the
following:
(1) Imposes an assessment or
fee in connection with the marketing of an owner's interest in an amount that exceeds the association's actual
or direct costs. That assessment or fee shall be deemed to violate
the limitation set forth in Section 1366.1.
(2) Establishes an exclusive
relationship with a real estate broker through which the sale or marketing of interests in the development is
required to occur. The limitation set forth in this paragraph does
not apply to the sale or marketing of separate interests owned by the association or to the sale or marketing of
common areas by the association.
(c) For purposes of this
section, "market" and "marketing" mean listing, advertising, or obtaining or providing access to show the
owner's interest in the development.
(d) This section does not
apply to rules or regulations made pursuant to Section 712 or 713 regarding real estate signs.
§1368
.
3 An association established to manage a common interest development has
standing to institute, defend, settle, or intervene in litigation, arbitration, mediation, or administrative
proceedings in its own name as the real party in interest and without joining with it the individual owners
of the common interest development, in matters pertaining to the following:
(a) Enforcement of the
governing documents.
(b) Damage to the common
area.
(c) Damage to a separate
interest that the association is obligated to maintain or repair.
(d) Damage to a separate
interest that arises out of, or is integrally related to, damage to the common area or a separate interest that
the association is obligated to maintain or repair.
§1368
.4
(a) In an action maintained by an association pursuant to subdivision (b),
(c), or (d) of Section 1368.3, the amount of damages recovered by the association shall be reduced by
the amount of damages allocated to the association or its managing agents in direct proportion to their
percentage of fault based upon principles of comparative fault. The comparative fault of the association or its
managing agents may be raised by way of defense, but shall not be the basis for a cross-action or separate
action against the association or its managing agents for contribution or implied indemnity, where the only
damage was sustained by the association or its members. It is the
intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision to require that comparative fault be pleaded as an
affirmative defense, rather than a separate cause of action, where the only damage was sustained by the
association or its members.
(b) In an action involving
damages described in subdivision (b), (c), or (d) of Section 1368.3, the defendant or
cross-defendant may allege and prove the comparative fault of the association or its managing agents as a setoff
to the liability of the defendant or cross-defendant even if the association is not a party to the litigation or
is no longer a party whether by reason of settlement, dismissal, or otherwise.
(c) Subdivisions (a) and (b)
apply to actions commenced on or after January 1, 1993.
(d) Nothing in this section
affects a person's liability under Section 1431, or the liability of the association or its managing agent for
an act or omission which causes damages to another.
§1368
.5
(a) Not later than 30 days prior to the filing of any civil action by the association against the declarant or other developer of
a common interest development for alleged damage to the common areas, alleged damage to the separate interests
that the association is obligated to maintain or repair, or alleged damage to the separate interests that arises
out of, or is integrally related to, damage to the common areas or separate interests that the association is
obligated to maintain or repair, the board of directors of the association shall provide a written notice to
each member of the association who appears on the records of the association when the notice is
provided. This notice shall specify all of the
following:
(1) That a meeting will take
place to discuss problems that may lead to the filing of a civil
action.
(2) The options, including
civil actions, that are available to address the
problems.
(3) The time and place of this meeting.
(b) Notwithstanding
subdivision (a), if the association has reason to believe that the applicable statute of limitations will expire
before the association files the civil action, the association
may give the notice, as described above, within 30 days after the filing of the action.
§1369
In a condominium project, no labor performed or services or materials furnished
with the consent of, or at the request of, an owner in the condominium project or his or her agent or his or her
contractor shall be the basis for the filing of a lien against any other property of any other owner in the
condominium project unless that other owner has expressly consented to or requested the performance of the labor
or furnishing of the materials or services. However, express
consent shall be deemed to have been given by the owner of any condominium in the case of emergency repairs
thereto. Labor performed or services or materials furnished for the
common areas, if duly authorized by the association, shall be deemed to be performed or furnished with the
express consent of each condominium owner. The owner of any
condominium may remove his or her condominium from a lien against two or more condominiums or any part thereof
by payment to the holder of the lien of the fraction of the total sum secured by the lien which is attributable
to his or her condominium.
§1369
.510
As used in this article:
(a) "Alternative dispute
resolution" means mediation, arbitration, conciliation, or other nonjudicial procedure that involves a neutral
party in the decisionmaking process. The form of alternative
dispute resolution chosen pursuant to this article may be binding or nonbinding, with the voluntary consent of
the parties.
(b) "Enforcement action"
means a civil action or proceeding, other than a
cross-complaint, for any of the following purposes:
(1) Enforcement of this
title.
(2) Enforcement of
the Nonprofit Mutual Benefit Corporation Law (Part 3 (commencing with Section 7110) of Division 2 of Title 1 of
the Corporations Code).
(3) Enforcement of the
governing documents of a common interest development.
§1369
.520
(a) An association or an owner or a member of a common interest development
may not file an enforcement action in the superior court unless the parties have endeavored to submit their
dispute to alternative dispute resolution pursuant to this article.
(b) This section applies
only to an enforcement action that is solely for declaratory, injunctive, or writ relief, or for that relief in
conjunction with a claim for monetary damages not in excess of the jurisdictional limits stated in Sections
116.220 and 116.221 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(c) This section does not
apply to a small claims action.
(d) Except as otherwise
provided by law, this section does not apply to an assessment dispute.
§1369
.530
(a) Any party to a dispute may initiate the process required by Section
1369.520 by serving on all other parties to the dispute a
Request for Resolution. The Request for Resolution shall include
all of the following:
(1) A brief description of
the dispute between the parties.
(2) A request for
alternative dispute resolution.
(3) A notice that the party
receiving the Request for Resolution is required to respond within 30 days of receipt or the request will be
deemed rejected.
(4) If the party on whom the
request is served is the owner of a separate interest, a copy of this article.
(b) Service of the Request
for Resolution shall be by personal delivery, first-class mail, express mail, facsimile transmission, or other
means reasonably calculated to provide the party on whom the request is served actual notice of the
request.
(c) A party on whom a
Request for Resolution is served has 30 days following service to accept or reject the request. If a party does not accept the request within that period, the request is
deemed rejected by the party.
§1369
.540
(a) If the party on whom a Request for Resolution is served accepts the
request, the parties shall complete the alternative dispute resolution within 90 days after the party initiating
the request receives the acceptance, unless this period is extended
by written stipulation signed by both parties.
(b) Chapter 2 (commencing
with Section 1115) of Division 9 of the Evidence Code applies to
any form of alternative dispute resolution initiated by a Request for Resolution under this article, other than
arbitration.
(c) The costs of the
alternative dispute resolution shall be borne by the parties.
§1369
.550
If
a Request for Resolution is served before the end of the applicable time limitation for commencing an
enforcement action, the time limitation is tolled during the following periods:
(a) The period provided in Section 1369.530 for response to a Request for Resolution.
(b) If the Request for
Resolution is accepted, the period provided by Section 1369.540
for completion of alternative dispute resolution, including any extension of time stipulated to by the parties
pursuant to Section 1369.540.
§1369
.560
(a) At the time of commencement of an enforcement action, the party
commencing the action shall file with the initial pleading a certificate stating that one or more of the
following conditions is satisfied:
(1) Alternative dispute
resolution has been completed in compliance with this article.
(2) One of the other parties
to the dispute did not accept the terms offered for alternative dispute resolution.
(3) Preliminary or temporary
injunctive relief is necessary.
(b) Failure to file a
certificate pursuant to subdivision (a) is grounds for a demurrer or a motion to strike unless the court finds
that dismissal of the action for failure to comply with this article would result in substantial prejudice to
one of the parties.
§1369
.570
(a) After an enforcement action is commenced, on written stipulation of the
parties, the matter may be referred to alternative dispute resolution. The referred action is stayed.
During the stay, the action is not subject to the rules implementing subdivision (c) of Section 68603 of the
Government Code.
(b) The costs of the
alternative dispute resolution shall be borne by the parties.
§1369
.580
In an enforcement action in which fees and costs may be awarded pursuant to
subdivision (c) of Section 1354, the court, in determining the amount of the award, may consider whether a
party's refusal to participate in alternative dispute resolution before commencement of the action was
reasonable.
§1369
.590
(a) An association shall annually provide its members a summary of the
provisions of this article that specifically references this article. The summary shall include the following language:
"Failure of a member of the association to comply with the alternative
dispute resolution requirements of Section 1369.520 of the
Civil Code may
result in the loss of your right to sue the association or another member of the association regarding
enforcement of the governing documents or the applicable law."
(b) The summary shall be
provided either at the time the pro forma budget required by Section 1365 is distributed or in the manner
prescribed in Section 5016 of the Corporations Code. The summary shall
include a description of the association's internal dispute resolution process, as required by Section
1363.850.
§1370
Any deed, declaration, or condominium plan for a common interest development
shall be liberally construed to facilitate the operation of the common interest development, and its provisions
shall be presumed to be independent and severable. Nothing in
Article 3 (commencing with Section 715) of Chapter 2 of Title 2 of Part 1 of this division shall operate to
invalidate any provisions of the governing documents of a common interest development.
§1371
In interpreting deeds and condominium plans, the existing physical boundaries
of a unit in a condominium project, when the boundaries of the unit are contained within a building, or of a
unit reconstructed in substantial accordance with the original plans thereof, shall be conclusively presumed to
be its boundaries rather than the metes and bounds expressed in the deed or condominium plan, if any exists,
regardless of settling or lateral movement of the building and regardless of minor variance between boundaries
shown on the plan or in the deed and those of the building.
§1372
Unless a contrary intent is clearly expressed, local zoning ordinances shall be
construed to treat like structures, lots, parcels, areas, or spaces in like manner regardless of whether the
common interest development is a community apartment project, condominium project, planned development, or stock
cooperative.
§1373
(a) The following provisions do not apply to a common interest development
that is limited to industrial or commercial uses by zoning or by a declaration of covenants, conditions, and
restrictions that has been recorded in the official records of each county in which the common interest
development is located:
(1) Section
1356.
(2) Article 4 (commencing
with Section 1357.100) of Chapter 2 of Title 6 of Part 4 of Division 2.
(3) Subdivision (b) of
Section 1363.
(4) Section
1365.
(5) Section
1365.5.
(6) Subdivision (b) of
Section 1366.
(7) Section
1366.1.
(8) Section
1368.
(9) Section
1378.
(b) The Legislature finds
that the provisions listed in subdivision (a) are appropriate to protect purchasers in residential common
interest developments, however, the provisions may not be necessary to protect purchasers in commercial or
industrial developments since the application of those provisions could result in unnecessary burdens and costs
for these types of developments.
§1374
Nothing in this title may be
construed to apply to a development wherein there does not exist a common area as defined in subdivision (b) of
Section 1351. This section is declaratory of existing
law.
§1375
(a) Before an association files a complaint for damages against a builder,
developer, or general contractor ("respondent") of a common interest development based upon a claim for defects
in the design or construction of the common interest development, all of the requirements of this section shall
be satisfied with respect to the builder, developer, or general contractor.
(b) The association shall
serve upon the respondent a "Notice of Commencement of Legal Proceedings." The notice shall be served by certified mail to the registered agent of the
respondent, or if there is no registered agent, then to any officer of the respondent. If there are no current officers of the respondent, service shall be upon the
person or entity otherwise authorized by law to receive service of process. Service upon the general contractor shall be sufficient to initiate the
process set forth in this section with regard to any builder or developer, if the builder or developer is not
amenable to service of process by the foregoing methods. This
notice shall toll all applicable statutes of limitation and repose, whether contractual or statutory, by and
against all potentially responsible parties, regardless of whether they were named in the notice, including
claims for indemnity applicable to the claim for the period set forth in subdivision (c). The notice shall include all of the following:
(1) The name and location of
the project.
(2) An initial list of
defects sufficient to apprise the respondent of the general nature of the defects at issue.
(3) A description of the
results of the defects, if known.
(4) A summary of the results
of a survey or questionnaire distributed to homeowners to determine the nature and extent of defects, if a
survey has been conducted or a questionnaire has been distributed.
(5) Either a summary of the
results of testing conducted to determine the nature and extent of defects or the actual test results, if that
testing has been conducted.
(c) Service of the notice
shall commence a period, not to exceed 180 days, during which the association, the respondent, and all other
participating parties shall try to resolve the dispute through the processes set forth in this
section. This 180-day period may be extended for one additional
period, not to exceed 180 days, only upon the mutual agreement of the association, the respondent, and any
parties not deemed peripheral pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (e). Any extensions beyond the first extension shall require the agreement of all
participating parties. Unless extended, the dispute resolution
process prescribed by this section shall be deemed completed. All
extensions shall continue the tolling period described in subdivision (b).
(d) Within 25 days of the
date the association serves the Notice of Commencement of Legal Proceedings, the respondent may request in
writing to meet and confer with the board of directors of the association. Unless the respondent and the association otherwise agree, there shall be not
more than one meeting, which shall take place no later than 10 days from the date of the respondent's written
request, at a mutually agreeable time and place. The meeting shall
be subject to subdivision (b) of Section 1363.05. The discussions at the meeting are privileged communications
and are not admissible in evidence in any civil action, unless
the association and the respondent consent in writing to their admission.
(e) Upon receipt of the
notice, the respondent shall, within 60 days, comply with the following:
(1) The respondent shall
provide the association with access to, for inspection and copying of, all plans and specifications,
subcontracts, and other construction files for the project that are reasonably calculated to lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence regarding the defects claimed. The
association shall provide the respondent with access to, for inspection and copying of, all files reasonably
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence regarding the defects claimed, including all reserve
studies, maintenance records and any survey questionnaires, or results of testing to determine the nature and
extent of defects. To the extent any of the above documents are
withheld based on privilege, a privilege log shall be prepared and submitted to all other
parties. All other potentially responsible parties shall have
the same rights as the respondent regarding the production of documents upon receipt of written notice of the
claim, and shall produce all relevant documents within 60 days of receipt of the notice of the
claim.
(2) The respondent shall
provide written notice by certified mail to all subcontractors, design professionals, their insurers, and the
insurers of any additional insured whose identities are known to the respondent or readily ascertainable by
review of the project files or other similar sources and whose potential responsibility appears on the face of
the notice. This notice to subcontractors, design professionals,
and insurers shall include a copy of the Notice of Commencement of Legal Proceedings, and shall specify the date
and manner by which the parties shall meet and confer to select a dispute resolution facilitator pursuant to
paragraph (1) of subdivision (f), advise the recipient of its obligation to participate in the meet and confer
or serve a written acknowledgment of receipt regarding this notice, advise the recipient that it will waive any
challenge to selection of the dispute resolution facilitator if it elects not to participate in the meet and
confer, advise the recipient that it may be bound by any settlement reached pursuant to subdivision (d) of
Section 1375.05, advise the recipient that it may be deemed to
have waived rights to conduct inspection and testing pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 1375.05, advise the recipient that it may seek the assistance of an
attorney, and advise the recipient that it should contact its insurer, if any. Any subcontractor or design professional, or insurer for that subcontractor,
design professional, or additional insured, who receives written notice from the respondent regarding the meet
and confer shall, prior to the meet and confer, serve on the respondent a written acknowledgment of receipt.
That subcontractor or design professional shall, within 10 days of service of the written acknowledgment of
receipt, provide to the association and the respondent a Statement of Insurance that includes both of the
following:
(A) The names, addresses,
and contact persons, if known, of all insurance carriers, whether primary or excess and regardless of whether a
deductible or self-insured retention applies, whose policies were in effect from the commencement of
construction of the subject project to the present and which potentially cover the subject
claims.
(B) The applicable policy
numbers for each policy of insurance provided.
(3) Any subcontractor or
design professional, or insurer for that subcontractor, design professional, or additional insured, who so
chooses, may, at any time, make a written request to the dispute resolution facilitator for designation as a
peripheral party. That request shall be served contemporaneously on the association and the
respondent. If no objection to that designation is received within
15 days, or upon rejection of that objection, the dispute resolution facilitator shall designate that
subcontractor or design professional as a peripheral party, and shall thereafter seek to limit the attendance of
that subcontractor or design professional only to those dispute resolution sessions deemed peripheral party
sessions or to those sessions during which the dispute resolution facilitator believes settlement as to
peripheral parties may be finalized.
Nothing in this
subdivision shall preclude a party who has been designated a peripheral party from being reclassified as a
nonperipheral party, nor shall this subdivision preclude a party designated as a nonperipheral party from being
reclassified as a peripheral party after notice to all parties and an opportunity to object. For purposes of this subdivision, a peripheral party is a party having total
claimed exposure of less than twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000).
(f)(1) Within 20 days of
sending the notice set forth in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e), the association, respondent, subcontractors,
design professionals, and their insurers who have been sent a notice as described in paragraph (2) of
subdivision (e) shall meet and confer in an effort to select a dispute resolution facilitator to preside over
the mandatory dispute resolution process prescribed by this section. Any subcontractor or design professional who has been given timely notice of
this meeting but who does not participate, waives any challenge he or she may have as to the selection of the
dispute resolution facilitator. The role of the dispute resolution
facilitator is to attempt to resolve the conflict in a fair manner.
The dispute resolution facilitator shall be sufficiently knowledgeable in the subject matter and be able to
devote sufficient time to the case. The dispute resolution
facilitator shall not be required to reside in or have an office in the county in which the project is
located. The dispute resolution facilitator and the participating
parties shall agree to a date, time, and location to hold a case management meeting of all parties and the
dispute resolution facilitator, to discuss the claims being asserted and the scheduling of events under this
section. The case management meeting with the dispute resolution facilitator shall be held within 100 days of
service of the Notice of Commencement of Legal Proceedings at a location in the county where the project is
located. Written notice of the case management meeting with the
dispute resolution facilitator shall be sent by the respondent to the association, subcontractors and design
professionals, and their insurers who are known to the respondent to be on notice of the claim, no later than 10
days prior to the case management meeting, and shall specify its date, time, and location. The dispute resolution facilitator in consultation with the respondent shall
maintain a contact list of the participating parties.
(2) No later than 10 days
prior to the case management meeting, the dispute resolution facilitator shall disclose to the parties all
matters that could cause a person aware of the facts to reasonably entertain a doubt that the proposed dispute
resolution facilitator would be able to resolve the conflict in a fair manner. The facilitator's disclosure shall include the existence of any ground
specified in Section 170.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure for disqualification of a judge, any attorney-client
relationship the facilitator has or had with any party or lawyer for a party to the dispute resolution process,
and any professional or significant personal relationship the facilitator or his or her spouse or minor child
living in the household has or had with any party to the dispute resolution process. The disclosure shall also be provided to any subsequently noticed
subcontractor or design professional within 10 days of the notice.
(3) A dispute resolution
facilitator shall be disqualified by the court if he or she fails to comply with this paragraph and any party to
the dispute resolution process serves a notice of disqualification prior to the case management
meeting. If the dispute resolution facilitator complies with this
paragraph, he or she shall be disqualified by the court on the basis of the disclosure if any party to the
dispute resolution process serves a notice of disqualification prior to the case management
meeting.
(4) If the parties cannot
mutually agree to a dispute resolution facilitator, then each party shall submit a list of three dispute
resolution facilitators. Each party may then strike one nominee
from the other parties' list, and petition the court, pursuant to the procedure described in subdivisions (n)
and (o), for final selection of the dispute resolution facilitator.
The court may issue an order for final selection of the dispute resolution facilitator pursuant to this
paragraph.
(5) Any subcontractor or
design professional who receives notice of the association's claim without having previously received timely
notice of the meet and confer to select the dispute resolution facilitator shall be notified by the respondent
regarding the name, address, and telephone number of the dispute resolution facilitator. Any such subcontractor or design professional may serve upon the parties and
the dispute resolution facilitator a written objection to the dispute resolution facilitator within 15 days of
receiving notice of the claim. Within seven days after service of
this objection, the subcontractor or design professional may petition the superior court to replace the dispute
resolution facilitator. The court may replace the dispute
resolution facilitator only upon a showing of good cause, liberally construed. Failure to satisfy the deadlines set forth in this subdivision shall
constitute a waiver of the right to challenge the dispute resolution facilitator.
(6) The costs of the dispute
resolution facilitator shall be apportioned in the following manner: one-third to be paid by the association; one-third to be paid by the
respondent; and one-third to be paid by the subcontractors and design professionals, as allocated among them by
the dispute resolution facilitator. The costs of the dispute
resolution facilitator shall be recoverable by the prevailing party in any subsequent litigation pursuant to
Section 1032 of the Code of Civil Procedure, provided however that any nonsettling party may, prior to
the filing of the complaint, petition the facilitator to reallocate the costs of the dispute resolution
facilitator as they apply to any nonsettling party. The
determination of the dispute resolution facilitator with respect to the allocation of these costs shall be
binding in any subsequent litigation. The dispute resolution
facilitator shall take into account all relevant factors and equities between all parties in the dispute
resolution process when reallocating costs.
(7) In the event the dispute
resolution facilitator is replaced at any time, the case management statement created pursuant to subdivision
(h) shall remain in full force and effect.
(8) The dispute resolution
facilitator shall be empowered to enforce all provisions of this section.
(g)(1) No later than the
case management meeting, the parties shall begin to generate a data compilation showing the following
information regarding the alleged defects at issue:
(A) The scope of
the work performed by each potentially responsible subcontractor.
(B) The tract or phase
number in which each subcontractor provided goods or services, or both.
(C) The units, either by
address, unit number, or lot number, at which each subcontractor provided goods or services, or
both.
(2) This data compilation
shall be updated as needed to reflect additional information. Each
party attending the case management meeting, and any subsequent meeting pursuant to this section, shall provide
all information available to that party relevant to this data compilation.
(h) At the case management
meeting, the parties shall, with the assistance of the dispute resolution facilitator, reach agreement on a case
management statement, which shall set forth all of the elements set forth in paragraphs (1) to (8), inclusive,
except that the parties may dispense with one or more of these elements if they agree that it is appropriate to
do so. The case management statement shall provide that the
following elements shall take place in the following order:
(1) Establishment
of a document depository, located in the county where the project is located, for deposit of documents, defect
lists, demands, and other information provided for under this section. All documents exchanged by the parties and all documents created pursuant to
this subdivision shall be deposited in the document depository, which shall be available to all parties
throughout the prefiling dispute resolution process and in any subsequent litigation. When any document is deposited in the document depository, the party
depositing the document shall provide written notice identifying the document to all other parties. The costs of
maintaining the document depository shall be apportioned among the parties in the same manner as the costs of
the dispute resolution facilitator.
(2) Provision of a more
detailed list of defects by the association to the respondent after the association completes a visual
inspection of the project. This list of defects shall provide
sufficient detail for the respondent to ensure that all potentially responsible subcontractors and design
professionals are provided with notice of the dispute resolution process. If not already completed prior to the
case management meeting, the Notice of Commencement of Legal Proceedings shall be served by the respondent on
all additional subcontractors and design professionals whose potential responsibility appears on the face of the
more detailed list of defects within seven days of receipt of the more detailed list. The respondent shall serve a copy of the case management statement, including
the name, address, and telephone number of the dispute resolution facilitator, to all the potentially
responsible subcontractors and design professionals at the same time.
(3) Nonintrusive visual
inspection of the project by the respondent, subcontractors, and design professionals.
(4) Invasive testing
conducted by the association, if the association deems appropriate.
All parties may observe and photograph any testing conducted by the association pursuant to this paragraph, but
may not take samples or direct testing unless, by mutual agreement, costs of testing are shared by the
parties.
(5) Provision by the
association of a comprehensive demand which provides sufficient detail for the parties to engage in meaningful
dispute resolution as contemplated under this section.
(6) Invasive testing
conducted by the respondent, subcontractors, and design professionals, if they deem
appropriate.
(7) Allowance for
modification of the demand by the association if new issues arise during the testing conducted by the
respondent, subcontractor, or design professionals.
(8) Facilitated dispute
resolution of the claim, with all parties, including peripheral parties, as appropriate, and insurers, if any,
present and having settlement authority. The dispute resolution
facilitators shall endeavor to set specific times for the attendance of specific parties at dispute resolution
sessions. If the dispute resolution facilitator does not set
specific times for the attendance of parties at dispute resolution sessions, the dispute resolution facilitator
shall permit those parties to participate in dispute resolution sessions by telephone.
(i) In addition to the
foregoing elements of the case management statement described in subdivision (h), upon mutual agreement of the
parties, the dispute resolution facilitator may include any or all of the following elements in a case
management statement: the exchange of consultant or expert photographs; expert presentations; expert meetings;
or any other mechanism deemed appropriate by the parties in the interest of resolving the
dispute.
(j) The dispute resolution
facilitator, with the guidance of the parties, shall at the time the case management statement is established,
set deadlines for the occurrence of each event set forth in the case management statement, taking into account
such factors as the size and complexity of the case, and the requirement of this section that this dispute
resolution process not exceed 180 days absent agreement of the parties to an extension of time.
(k)(1)(A) At a time to be
determined by the dispute resolution facilitator, the respondent may submit to the association all of the
following:
(i) A request to meet with
the board to discuss a written settlement offer.
(ii) A written settlement offer, and a concise explanation of the reasons for the
terms of the offer.
(iii) A statement that the
respondent has access to sufficient funds to satisfy the conditions of the settlement offer.
(iv) A summary of the
results of testing conducted for the purposes of determining the nature and extent of defects, if this testing
has been conducted, unless the association provided the respondent with actual test results.
(B) If the respondent does
not timely submit the items required by this subdivision, the association shall be relieved of any further
obligation to satisfy the requirements of this subdivision only.
(C) No less than 10 days
after the respondent submits the items required by this paragraph, the respondent and the board of directors of
the association shall meet and confer about the respondent's settlement offer.
(D) If the association's
board of directors rejects a settlement offer presented at the meeting held pursuant to this subdivision, the
board shall hold a meeting open to each member of the association.
The meeting shall be held no less than 15 days before the association commences an action for damages against
the respondent.
(E) No less than 15 days
before this meeting is held, a written notice shall be sent to each member of the association specifying all of
the following:
(i) That a meeting will take
place to discuss problems that may lead to the filing of a civil
action, and the time and place of this meeting.
(ii) The options that are
available to address the problems, including the filing of a civil action and a statement of the various alternatives that are reasonably
foreseeable by the association to pay for those options and whether these payments are expected to be made from
the use of reserve account funds or the imposition of regular or special assessments, or emergency assessment
increases.
(iii) The complete text of
any written settlement offer, and a concise explanation of the specific reasons for the terms of the offer
submitted to the board at the meeting held pursuant to subdivision (d) that was received from the
respondent.
(F) The respondent shall pay
all expenses attributable to sending the settlement offer to all members of the association. The respondent shall also pay the expense of holding the meeting, not to
exceed three dollars ($3) per association member.
(G) The discussions at the
meeting and the contents of the notice and the items required to be specified in the notice pursuant to
paragraph (E) are privileged communications and are not admissible in evidence in any civil action, unless the association consents to their
admission.
(H) No more than one request
to meet and discuss a written settlement offer may be made by the respondent pursuant to this
subdivision.
(l) Except for the purpose of in camera review as provided in subdivision (c) of
Section 1375.05, all defect lists and demands, communications,
negotiations, and settlement offers made in the course of the prelitigation dispute resolution process provided
by this section shall be inadmissible pursuant to Sections 1119 to 1124, inclusive, of the Evidence
Code and all applicable decisional law. This inadmissibility shall not be extended to any other documents or
communications which would not otherwise be deemed inadmissible.
(m) Any subcontractor or
design professional may, at any time, petition the dispute resolution facilitator to release that party from the
dispute resolution process upon a showing that the subcontractor or design professional is not potentially
responsible for the defect claims at issue. The petition shall be
served contemporaneously on all other parties, who shall have 15 days from the date of service to
object. If a subcontractor or design professional is released, and
it later appears to the dispute resolution facilitator that it may be a responsible party in light of the
current defect list or demand, the respondent shall renotice the party as provided by paragraph (2) of
subdivision (e), provide a copy of the current defect list or demand, and direct the party to attend a dispute
resolution session at a stated time and location. A party who
subsequently appears after having been released by the dispute resolution facilitator shall not be prejudiced by
its absence from the dispute resolution process as the result of having been previously released by the dispute
resolution facilitator.
(n) Any party may, at any
time, petition the superior court in the county where the project is located, upon a showing of good cause, and
the court may issue an order, for any of the following, or for appointment of a referee to resolve a dispute
regarding any of the following:
(1) To take a deposition of
any party to the process, or subpoena a third party for deposition or production of documents, which is
necessary to further prelitigation resolution of the dispute.
(2) To resolve any disputes
concerning inspection, testing, production of documents, or exchange of information provided for under this
section.
(3) To resolve any
disagreements relative to the timing or contents of the case management statement.
(4) To authorize internal
extensions of timeframes set forth in the case management statement.
(5) To seek a determination
that a settlement is a good faith settlement pursuant to Section 877.6 of the Code of Civil Procedure and
all related authorities. The page limitations and meet and confer
requirements specified in this section shall not apply to these motions, which may be made on shortened
notice. Instead, these motions shall be subject to other applicable
state law, rules of court, and local rules. A determination made by
the court pursuant to this motion shall have the same force and effect as the determination of a postfiling
application or motion for good faith settlement.
(6) To ensure compliance, on shortened notice, with the obligation to provide
a Statement of Insurance pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e).
(7) For any other relief
appropriate to the enforcement of the provisions of this section, including the ordering of parties, and
insurers, if any, to the dispute resolution process with settlement authority.
(o)(1) A petition filed
pursuant to subdivision (n) shall be filed in the superior court in the county in which the project is
located. The court shall hear and decide the petition within 10
days after filing. The petitioning party shall serve the petition
on all parties, including the date, time, and location of the hearing no later than five business days prior to
the hearing. Any responsive papers shall be filed and served no
later than three business days prior to the hearing. Any petition
or response filed under this section shall be no more than three pages in length.
(2) All parties shall meet
with the dispute resolution facilitator, if one has been appointed and confer in person or by the telephone
prior to the filing of that petition to attempt to resolve the matter without requiring court
intervention.
(p)
As
used in this section:
(1) "Association" shall have
the same meaning as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1351.
(2) "Builder" means the
declarant, as defined in subdivision (g) of Section 1351.
(3) "Common interest
development" shall have the same meaning as in subdivision (c) of Section 1351, except that it shall not include
developments or projects with less than 20 units.
(q) The alternative dispute
resolution process and procedures described in this section shall have no application or legal effect other than
as described in this section.
(r) This section shall
become operative on July 1, 2002, however it shall not apply to any pending suit or claim for which notice has
previously been given.
(s) This section shall
become inoperative on July 1, 2010, and as of January 1, 2017, and as of January 1, 2018, is repealed, unless a
later enacted statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes
inoperative and is repealed.
§1375
.05
(a) Upon the completion of the mandatory prefiling dispute resolution process
described in Section 1375, if the parties have not settled the
matter, the association or its assignee may file a complaint in the superior court in the county in which the
project is located. Those matters shall be given trial
priority.
(b) In assigning trial
priority, the court shall assign the earliest possible trial date, taking into consideration the pretrial
preparation completed pursuant to Section 1375, and shall deem
the complaint to have been filed on the date of service of the Notice of Commencement of Legal Proceedings
described under Section 1375.
(c) Any respondent,
subcontractor, or design professional who received timely prior notice of the inspections and testing conducted
under Section 1375 shall be prohibited from engaging in
additional inspection or testing, except if all of the following specific conditions are met, upon motion to the
court:
(1) There is an insurer for
a subcontractor or design professional, that did not have timely notice that legal proceedings were commenced
under Section 1375 at least 30 days prior to the commencement of
inspections or testing pursuant to paragraph (6) of subdivision (h) of Section 1375.
(2) The insurer's insured
did not participate in any inspections or testing conducted under the provisions of paragraph (6) of subdivision
(h) of Section 1375.
(3) The insurer has, after
receiving notice of a complaint filed in superior court under subdivision (a), retained separate counsel, who
did not participate in the Section 1375 dispute resolution
process, to defend its insured as to the allegations in the complaint.
(4) It is reasonably likely
that the insured would suffer prejudice if additional inspections or testing are not permitted.
(5) The information
obtainable through the proposed additional inspections or testing is not available through any reasonable
alternative sources.
If the court permits additional inspections or testing upon finding that
these requirements are met, any additional inspections or testing shall be limited to the extent reasonably
necessary to avoid the likelihood of prejudice and shall be coordinated among all similarly situated parties to
ensure that they occur without unnecessary duplication. For
purposes of providing notice to an insurer prior to inspections or testing under paragraph (6) of subdivision
(h) of Section 1375, if notice of the proceedings was not
provided by the insurer's insured, notice may be made via certified mail either by the subcontractor, design
professional, association, or respondent to the address specified in the Statement of Insurance provided under
paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 1375. Nothing herein shall affect the rights of an intervenor who files a complaint
in intervention. If the association alleges defects that were not
specified in the prefiling dispute resolution process under Section 1375, the respondent, subcontractor, and design professionals shall be
permitted to engage in testing or inspection necessary to respond to the additional claims. A party who seeks additional inspections or testing based upon the amendment
of claims shall apply to the court for leave to conduct those inspections or that testing.
If the court determines that it must review the defect claims alleged by the
association in the prefiling dispute resolution process in order to determine whether the association alleges
new or additional defects, this review shall be conducted in camera. Upon objection of any party, the court shall refer the matter to a judge other
than the assigned trial judge to determine if the claim has been amended in a way that requires additional
testing or inspection.
(d) Any subcontractor or
design professional who had notice of the facilitated dispute resolution conducted under Section 1375 but failed to attend, or attended without settlement authority, shall
be bound by the amount of any settlement reached in the facilitated dispute resolution in any subsequent trial,
although the affected party may introduce evidence as to the allocation of the settlement. Any party who failed to participate in the facilitated dispute resolution
because the party did not receive timely notice of the mediation shall be relieved of any obligation to
participate in the settlement. Notwithstanding any privilege
applicable to the prefiling dispute resolution process provided by Section 1375, evidence may be introduced by any party to show whether a
subcontractor or design professional failed to attend or attended without settlement authority. The binding effect of this subdivision shall in no way diminish or reduce a
nonsettling subcontractor or design professional's right to defend itself or assert all available defenses
relevant to its liability in any subsequent trial. For purposes of
this subdivision, a subcontractor or design professional shall not be deemed to have attended without settlement
authority because it asserted defenses to its potential liability.
(e) Notice of the
facilitated dispute resolution conducted under Section 1375 must
be mailed by the respondent no later than 20 days prior to the date of the first facilitated dispute resolution
session to all parties. Notice shall also be mailed to each of
these parties' known insurance carriers. Mailing of this notice
shall be by certified mail. Any subsequent facilitated dispute
resolution notices shall be served by any means reasonably calculated to provide those parties actual
notice.
(f) As to the complaint, the
order of discovery shall, at the request of any defendant, except upon a showing of good cause, permit the
association's expert witnesses to be deposed prior to any percipient party depositions. The depositions shall, at the request of the association, be followed
immediately by the defendant's experts and then by the subcontractors' and design professionals' experts, except
on a showing of good cause. For purposes of this section, in
determining what constitutes "good cause," the court shall consider, among other things, the goal of early
disclosure of defects and whether the expert is prepared to render a final opinion, except that the court may
modify the scope of any expert's deposition to address those concerns.
(g)(1) The only method of
seeking judicial relief for the failure of the association or the respondent to complete the dispute resolution
process under Section 1375 shall be the assertion, as provided
for in this subdivision, of a procedural deficiency to an action for damages by the association against the
respondent after that action has been filed. A verified application
asserting a procedural deficiency shall be filed with the court no later than 90 days after the answer to the
plaintiff's complaint has been served, unless the court finds that extraordinary conditions
exist.
(2) Upon the verified
application of the association or the respondent alleging substantial noncompliance with Section 1375, the court shall schedule a hearing within 21 days of the application
to determine whether the association or respondent has substantially complied with this section. The issue may be determined upon affidavits or upon oral testimony, in the
discretion of the court.
(3) (A) If the court finds
that the association or the respondent did not substantially comply with this paragraph, the court shall stay
the action for up to 90 days to allow the noncomplying party to establish substantial compliance. The court shall set a hearing within 90 days to determine substantial
compliance. At any time, the court may, for good cause shown,
extend the period of the stay upon application of the noncomplying party.
(B) If, within the time set
by the court pursuant to this paragraph, the association or the respondent has not established that it has
substantially complied with this section, the court shall determine if, in the interest of justice, the action
should be dismissed without prejudice, or if another remedy should be fashioned. Under no circumstances shall the court dismiss the action with prejudice as a
result of the association's failure to substantially comply with this section. In determining the appropriate remedy, the court shall consider the extent to
which the respondent has complied with this section.
(h) This section is
operative on July 1, 2002, but does not apply to any action or proceeding pending on that date.
(i) This section shall
become inoperative on July 1, 2010, and, as of January 1, 2011, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute that
is enacted before January 1, 2011, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is
repealed.
§1375
.1
(a) As soon as is reasonably
practicable after the association and the builder have entered into a settlement agreement or the matter has
otherwise been resolved regarding alleged defects in the common areas, alleged defects in the separate interests
that the association is obligated to maintain or repair, or alleged defects in the separate interests that arise
out of, or are integrally related to, defects in the common areas or separate interests that the association is
obligated to maintain or repair, where the defects giving rise to the dispute have not been corrected, the
association shall, in writing, inform only the members of the association whose names appear on the records of
the association that the matter has been resolved, by settlement agreement or other means, and disclose all of
the following:
(1) A general description of
the defects that the association reasonably believes, as of the date of the disclosure, will be corrected or
replaced.
(2) A good faith estimate,
as of the date of the disclosure, of when the association believes that the defects identified in paragraph (1)
will be corrected or replaced. The association may state that the
estimate may be modified.
(3) The status of the claims
for defects in the design or construction of the common interest development that were not identified in
paragraph (1) whether expressed in a preliminary list of defects sent to each member of the association or
otherwise claimed and disclosed to the members of the association.
(b) Nothing in this section
shall preclude an association from amending the disclosures required pursuant to subdivision (a), and any
amendments shall supersede any prior conflicting information disclosed to the members of the association and
shall retain any privilege attached to the original disclosures.
(c) Disclosure of the
information required pursuant to subdivision (a) or authorized by subdivision (b) shall not waive any privilege
attached to the information.
(d) For the purposes of the
disclosures required pursuant to this section, the term "defects" shall be defined to include any damage
resulting from defects.
§1376
(a) Any covenant, condition, or restriction contained in any deed, contract,
security instrument, or other instrument affecting the transfer or sale of, or any interest in, a common
interest development that effectively prohibits or restricts the installation or use of a video or television
antenna, including a satellite dish, or that effectively prohibits or restricts the attachment of that antenna
to a structure within that development where the antenna is not visible from any street or common area, except
as otherwise prohibited or restricted by law, is void and unenforceable as to its application to the
installation or use of a video or television antenna that has a diameter or diagonal measurement of 36 inches or
less.
(b) This section shall not
apply to any covenant, condition, or restriction, as described in subdivision (a), that imposes reasonable
restrictions on the installation or use of a video or television antenna, including a satellite dish, that has a
diameter or diagonal measurement of 36 inches or less. For purposes
of this section, "reasonable restrictions" means those restrictions that do not significantly increase the cost
of the video or television antenna system, including all related equipment, or significantly decrease its
efficiency or performance and include all of the following:
(1) Requirements for
application and notice to the association prior to the installation.
(2) Requirement of the owner
of a separate interest, as defined in Section 1351, to obtain the approval of the association for the
installation of a video or television antenna that has a diameter or diagonal measurement of 36 inches or less
on a separate interest owned by another.
(3) Provision for the
maintenance, repair, or replacement of roofs or other building components.
(4) Requirements for
installers of a video or television antenna to indemnify or reimburse the association or its members for loss or
damage caused by the installation, maintenance, or use of a video or television antenna that has a diameter or
diagonal measurement of 36 inches or less.
(c) Whenever approval is
required for the installation or use of a video or television antenna, including a satellite dish, the
application for approval shall be processed by the appropriate approving entity for the common interest
development in the same manner as an application for approval of an architectural modification to the property,
and the issuance of a decision on the application shall not be willfully delayed.
(d) In any action to enforce
compliance with this section, the prevailing party shall be awarded reasonable attorney's fees.
§1378
(a) This section applies if an association's governing documents require
association approval before an owner of a separate interest may make a physical change to the owner's separate
interest or to the common area. In reviewing and approving or
disapproving a proposed change, the association shall satisfy the following requirements:
(1) The association shall
provide a fair, reasonable, and expeditious procedure for making its decision. The procedure shall be included in the association's governing
documents. The procedure shall provide for prompt
deadlines. The procedure shall state the maximum time for response
to an application or a request for reconsideration by the board of directors.
(2) A decision on a proposed
change shall be made in good faith and may not be unreasonable, arbitrary, or capricious.
(3) Notwithstanding a
contrary provision of the governing documents, a decision on a proposed change may not violate any governing
provision of law, including, but not limited to, the Fair Employment and Housing Act (Part 2.8 (commencing with
Section 12900) of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code),
or a building code or other applicable law governing land use or
public safety.
(4) A decision on a proposed
change shall be in writing. If a proposed change is disapproved,
the written decision shall include both an explanation of why the proposed change is disapproved and a
description of the procedure for reconsideration of the decision by the board of directors.
(5) If a proposed change is
disapproved, the applicant is entitled to reconsideration by the board of directors of the association that made
the decision, at an open meeting of the board. This paragraph does
not require reconsideration of a decision that is made by the board of directors or a body that has the same
membership as the board of directors, at a meeting that satisfies the requirements of Section
1363.05. Reconsideration by the board does not constitute dispute
resolution within the meaning of Section 1363.820.
(b) Nothing in this section
authorizes a physical change to the common area in a manner that is inconsistent with an association's governing
documents, unless the change is required by law.
(c) An association shall
annually provide its members with notice of any requirements for association approval of physical changes to
property. The notice shall describe the types of changes that
require association approval and shall include a copy of the procedure used to review and approve or disapprove
a proposed change.

J & N Realty, Inc. -- real estate, property, planned unit development (PUD), townhouse, townhome, hoa, condo,
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real estate management service
Van Nuys condominium condo townhouse townhome
pud cid hoa homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
North Hollywood condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Woodland Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development
property common interest development real estate management service
Canoga Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa
pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest
development real estate management service
Reseda condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
San Fernando Valley condominium condo
townhouse townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development
real estate management service
Northridge condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Chatsworth condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
North Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
West Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Hollywood condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Burbank condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Glendale condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Pasadena condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
West Hollywood condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
West Los Angeles condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Beverly Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Santa Monica condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Venice condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Sylmar condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
San Fernando condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Lake View Terrace condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Simi Valley condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Porter Ranch condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Granada Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Mission Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Knollwood condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Pacoima condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Panorama City condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Arleta condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Sun Valley condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Sunland condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Tujunga condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
La Crescenta condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Altadena condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
La Canada Flintridge condominium condo
townhouse townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development
real estate management service
Warner Center condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Winnetka condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Valley Glen condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Verdugo City condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Montrose condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Sierra Madre condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Arcadia condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Monrovia real estate property hoa condo
management
Westlake Village condominium condo townhouse townhome hoa pud cid homeowner
association planned unit development property common interest development real estate management
service
Thousand Oaks condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Agoura Hills condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Calabasas condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Tarzana condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Encino condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Sherman Oaks condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Valley Village condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Studio City condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Toluca Lake condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Universal City condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
West Toluca Lake condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Eagle Rock condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
San Marino condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Beverly Glen condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Los Feliz condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Silver Lake condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Atwater Village condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Echo Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Glassell Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Cypress Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Highland Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Alhambra condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
San Marino condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
San Gabriel condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Pacific Palisades condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Brentwood condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Sawtelle condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Culver City condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Jefferson Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Westlake condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
East Los Angeles condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Monterey Park condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Mar Vista condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Canyon Country condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Santa Clarita condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Westwood condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Marina Del Rey condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Inglewood condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Valencia condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Newhall condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Castaic condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Saugus condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Moorpark condominium condo townhouse townhome
hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate
management service
Lake Balboa condominium condo townhouse
townhome hoa pud cid homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real
estate management service
Malibu condominium condo townhouse townhome hoa pud cid
homeowner association planned unit development property common interest development real estate management
service
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