Limits can be interpreted in multiple ways in your question.
Limits to the amount of assessments are managed by owners who vote against annual budgets. Every owner is best advised to understand how much it costs to operate the association, to protect it, to maintain it and to preserve everyone's real estate investment.
Limits as to collecting unpaid assessments usually reach as high as selling a unit or a home to collect unpaid assessments. This is usually a last resort, after all other collection options have been exhausted by the board.
Read your governing documents to understand how to become involved in the budget process, so at least you understand what your assessments pay for, and further, to understand your board's responsibility to collect assessments that you owe.
A property that is off limits
A property that is off limits
No, as it would conflict with the federal limits.
Read your governing documents to determine the limits of your ownership. If the association repairs something in the common area of your property, that is their responsibility and generally, these repairs are paid from the association's operating account. If the repairs were made to part of your property noted as 'limited common area', they may also be required to repair it and pay for it, or you may be: your governing documents are specific about maintenance of limited common areas. Again, who pays for repairs -- depending on their location -- is detailed in your governing documents. If your governing documents are silent on all these points, you may take the bills to a common interest community-savvy attorney to prove that you do not owe the repair expense. Your governing documents include the CC&Rs, the By-laws, and any amendments or resolutions passed by the board or owners.
Yes, there are exemption limits on various goods/property. If you good/property is above that amount you will need to "pay" the difference to the BK trustee or else lose that good/property. The exemption limits can cary based on your state and whether it allows federal exemption limits.
Way too broad of a question!
Yes it could be a gift. There are no limits to gifts.
Private property displays
Private property displays
Usually not. However, realize that when you don't pay your assessments, fines or special assessments -- for which the lien was filed -- you continue to ask your neighbors to pay your bills. You can continue to do this, so long as you're comfortable taking this position in your community.
That will depend on the laws of the jurisdiction authorizing the tax. In the same law that established the tax, they probably set the limits to collecting it.
Yes. If the governing documents provide for the process that the association uses to establish speed limits -- apparently on roads owned by the associaion -- and the speed limits are established and posted, and if the fine schedule has been published, then, yes. Otherwise, you may have a challenge. Tip: Driving fast in a residential community is unwise.