Read your governing documents to determine the process required to sell part of the common area. This may require an uber-majority of owners' votes, an amendment to your CC&Rs and so forth. Your association's legal counsel can answer this question specifically.
Read your governing documents to ascertain the percentage of votes by owners required for this action.
This is no standard.
A homeowners association cannot be a mandatory association without the consent of 100% of the property owners in the development attempting to establish an association. In addition to the consent of the property owners, the association must follow certain procedures and file the proper documents in order to subject the property to the association's rule.
Without a state listing, this will be a tough question to answer. You can ask anyone on the board of this association, or any property owner, who should have or be able to get that information for you.
Yes, a homeowners association lien can impede a mortgage loan. If a homeowner has outstanding unpaid dues or violations, the homeowners association may place a lien on the property. This lien takes priority over a mortgage, making it difficult for the homeowner to refinance or sell the property without addressing the lien first.
You need to have a local attorney review a copy of the HOA document. Your specific question cannot be answered here. The HOA document is not available for review of the sections you mentioned.
yes
If you purchased real estate already established as a homeowners association, you are subject to that private government. You received copies of the governing documents when you sat with the title company and signed that mountain of documents. Your realtor told you that you were buying into an association. _______________ However . . . If you purchased real estate in a community without an association, and your neighbors are forming an association, as an owner you are entitled to full disclosure as to what your liabilities are and/or will be once the association is formed. Usually, you can resist joining a newly formed association by being 'grand-fathered in' in your current exempt state, but when the property is sold, it may be required to become subject to the association -- or not. This is a legal issue with no standard. Best practices dictate that you engage the services of a local common-interest-community attorney to help you preserve and participate in the position you want.
You need to check the Homeowners' Association Rules and Regulations for any provision that would allow such an action. If that privilege was not reserved in the association documents, and the owner didn't grant that right in any other signed document then the answer would be NO.
Yes, you can get a cell phone plan without the customer agreement by going to smaller companies. For example, cricket has numerous plans were there is no agreement.
it depends on the company
Yes, Countries can trade with each other without free trade agreement.
I don't see any need for liability insurance in the case you described. In cases where you have a homeowners association or a condo owners association and they own common property such as a swimming pool, parks, roofs, sidewalks, etc. then they would have a need for both property and liability insurnance to cover these areas. This is what you dues are in place to pay for as well as maintenance.
no, without a signature there is no agreement of it.