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Norminn Norminn is offline
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Default HOA: "Tear down that house"

DerbyDad03 wrote:

On Sep 10, 1:44 pm, Norminn wrote:


DerbyDad03 wrote:


On Sep 10, 9:58 am, "HeyBub" wrote:


"[SANFORD, Fla.] A Sanford man whose wife and son were killed when an
airplane crashed into their home may have to tear down his rebuilt house
because a homeowners' association said he is breaking their rules."


http://www.local6.com/news/17427900/detail.html


As much as I dislike most HOA's, I can see a couple of sides to this
issue.


On one hand, if the poor widower wants to rebuild on the same lot
under the same HOA, then he should follow the rules. If not, move. If
they made exceptions for every tragic event that happened to someone
in the neighborhood then the rules would be a joke. "I can never drive
a car again because my wife died in an car accident. Let me keep my
pick-up truck." I'm not defending the HOA per se, but if someone
chooses to live in a HOA-controlled neighborhood, then they also
choose to live under their rules.


On the other hand, how did it get so far into the process ("a few
weeks from being completed') without the flags going up earlier?
Didn't he have to have the plans approved before construction started?
If the HOA approved them, then they can't stop it now. If he tried to
avoid the approval, hoping to play on their sympathies, then he is at
fault.


I think there is more to this story than just what's in the article.


Wonder where the city building code authority has been on the issue? No
permit? That is
tragic.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -



The city building code may not have anything to do with the specific
issue - the HOA's rules

The color of the shingles, the elevation, square footage and setbacks
may be fine as far as the city is concerned.

However, if these particular HOA rules take precedence over the city's
rules, then he could be in violation of the HOA even if he has a valid
permit from the city.


HOA can't take precedence, but may be stricter. I can't imagine any
municipality without basic
code requirements for the issues mentioned. Some setbacks just require
paperwork to get an
allowance to extend it.

The question that still remains in my mind is: How did they get within
weeks of completion before this surfaced?



Lots of boards meet only once per year, with board members who have
second homes far away.
Or they ignored it until someone complained. ) The tough part is that
construction is basic in
HOA/condo documents, have to be enforced or risk losing the next time an
issue comes up.
I have sympathy for the owner's situation, but too many people use
unfortunate circumstances
to get around rules that really do protect communities.....the kid with
a handicap who got a two-
story playhouse, the woman with a husband in military who violated sign
regs, etc, etc.