Los Angeles

  HOA Management    

J & N REALTY, INC.

Time-Honored Quality & Commitment Since 1993

- Primus Inter Pares -  

 

           ~ first among equals 

 

 

Important Information for Landlords  

 

          If you are an owner who leases your unit, we would like to make the leasing experience successful and positive for everyone by informing you of your responsibilities.  This will help preserve your property value specifically and maintain the association’s property value in general. 

   

          Your tenants may not be familiar with common-interest community living.  Please take a few minutes to explain to them that living in a community association are very different from living in a rental apartment community.  Specifically, your tenants, like all residents, are subject to the rules and regulations of the association, and it is up to you to educate them and see that they comply.  The association will assist you in this area, but the responsibility lies with you.  We recommend you provide your tenants with written copies of all policies and rules and advise them on the proper use of the association’s facilities.  You can obtain copies of these and other useful documents from the manager. 

 

          It is strongly recommended that you have a written lease agreement with your tenant.  As a lessor (property owner) of a home in a community association, the lease you use must require tenants to comply with the association’s governing documents.  In the event your tenant fails to comply with these documents, including the bylaws, or its rules and regulations, a representative of the association will first contact your tenants in an attempt to remedy the problem.  The association will send you a copy of any notice sent to your tenant.  

 

          If the tenant does not correct the violation, the association will contact you and expect you to remedy the violation using the recourse available to you through your lease agreement.  If you are unable to correct the violation, the association may pursue appropriate legal action against the tenant, and possibly against you. 

 

          The association asks that you provide the manager with the names and contact information of your tenants.  The association will add your tenants to its mailing list, and they will receive the newsletter, invitations to participate on committees, notices of social activities and general association-related information.  This information will also be used in case of emergency. 

 

          Follow these simple steps and you, the tenants, and the association will all have a positive community association living experience: 

 

· Provide your tenants with copies of association rules. 

 

· Educate tenants about the need to follow association rules, and see that they comply. 

 

· Advise tenants on the proper use of association facilities. 

 

· Use a written lease agreement. 

 

· Make sure your lease requires tenants to comply with all association governing documents. 

 

· Provide the association with contact information for your tenants. 

 

          Renters: If you do not have a copy of the association rules or you would like more information about the association, please contact a board member or manager. 

● PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
● CONDOMINIUM ADMINISTRATION
● HOA MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
● HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION SERVICES
● HOA FINANCIAL OPERATIONS
● PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENTS
● COMMON INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS
● HOA MAINTENANCE OPERATIONS
● HOA QUALITY OF SERVICE
● - Clarifying the Manager’s Role
● - Checklist for Identifying Deficient Management
● - Small Claims Court Actions
● - Compare Your Rent
● - Model Code of Ethics for Homeowners Association Board Members

It is the fate of the Property Manager to toil at the lower employments of life; to be rather driven by the fear of evil than attracted by the prospect of good; to be exposed to censure without hope of praise; to be disgraced by miscarriage or punished by neglect, where success would have been without applause and diligence without reward. While others may aspire to praise, the Property Manager can only hope to escape reproach, and even this negative recompense has yet been granted to very few.





 

 

 

 

HOA Board Members may request log-in information to our Members Only area, which is packed with lots of very unseful information cannot be found anywhere else on the web
 

As Property Managers, we all have learned primarily

through our mistakes and pursuits of false assumptions

rather than by our exposure to fountains of wisdom and 

knowledge.