View Single Post
  #99   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Too_Many_Tools Too_Many_Tools is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,380
Default HOA says no pickup trucks in driveway

On Dec 18, 11:27*am, "SteveB" toquerville@zionvistas wrote:
"Sanity" wrote in message

...







"Harry K" wrote in message
....
On Dec 17, 4:40 pm, "Sanity" wrote:
"Nate Nagel" wrote in message


...


Sanity wrote:
"Harry K" wrote in message
...
On Dec 17, 1:38 pm, wrote:
On Wed, 17 Dec 2008 05:52:28 -0800 (PST), "


wrote:
why anyone buys into deed restricted communities leaves me at a
loss........ my home means if I want a purple flamingo in the
front yard no one should be able to do a thing about it
There are people who don't want anyone around them to upset their
little
world with anything different than what their narrow mind
finds acceptable. I wouldn't be shocked if this case is appealed.
This fires a shot across the bow of every HOA in Florida.


BTW truck restrictions are not that rare around here. In Cape Coral
you can't have a truck in your driveway by city ordinance.


Wonder what kind of stroke the HOA would have were one to buy a
junker car, chop the top back off and remove the trunk lid, viola! a
Pickup but the registration will show it is a car.


Harry K


Explain something to me. Someone buys a home in an HOA. Prior to
buying they are given the docs and sign a statement to abide by them.
Then all of a sudden they scream, kick and cry when one of the regs
from the docs are enforced. Please explain why that person bought in
an HOA in the first place if he didn't want to follow their rules.
Don't get me wrong, I don't like HOA's but I sure wouldn't buy in one
if I disagreed with the docs and had no intention of following them..


I believe in the case that hit fark.com recently (I assume that that is
what this thread is about) the home moaner actually did check out the
requirements before buying, but the ones being enforced are not the
same
ones given to him to review pre-purchase. I think that he does have a
case if the facts are as represented in the article I read.


Oh, and HOA's suck.


nate


--
replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.
http://members.cox.net/njnagel


He only has a case if the docs and bylaws were not presented to him. And
I
guaranty he signed that he received and reviewed them before closing.-
Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


And if he was given a false copy of the rules and signed thinking they
were correct?


Harry K


Another conspiracy theory. * You are GIVEN a copy of the docs *and you
sign off that you received them. *No one slips a mickey to you.


And if they are faulty, you merely hire an attorney and spend $100,000 to
get it fixed. *What's the problem?

Steve- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


No problem for the HOA...they would simply use their fees to pay the
lawyers (including the fee from the "troublemaker") and fight
forever...because if they ran out of money they would just increase
the fees charged the entire HOA membership...including the
"troublemaker".

A classic case of a few abusing the many...because the many allow it
to happen.

Just say no to Lawn Nazis.

TMT