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Developers Breach of Fiduciary Duty
When the developer of a common interest development serves on the board of a homeowner association, or otherwise controls the board, the developer owes a fiduciary duty to the association and its members. This means the developer must:
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Place the interest of the association and its members
above his own interests; |
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Be absolutely loyal to the association; |
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Establish a separate HOA operating account and reserve
account on or before the date the first escrow closes; |
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Pay assessments into the HOA operating account, before the
delinquency date, for all unsold units or lots; |
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Use association funds (assessments) only for association
purposes which does not include paying costs to cure defects
or other non - association related expenses; |
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Provide the association (corporation) with copies of those
documents set forth in Regulation 2792.23 of the Real Estate
Commissioner of California; |
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Avoid or disclose any actual or potential conflicts of
interest; and |
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Repair any construction defects properly and timely
utilizing his own funds. |
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The failure of the developer, acting as a board member, to place the interests of the association and its members above his own interests can lead to a legal claim by the association or its members for monetary damages, including
punitive damages.
Developers sometimes breach in their fiduciary duty to the
association and its members by signing contracts on behalf of the
association with management companies and other service providers with
which the developer has a special relationship. New board members
taking over from a developer controlled board should investigate all
existing contractual relationships to make certain they are arms -
length agreements.
There will be no charge for the initial consultation.
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