Generally, the person would coordinate activities for the association, which may be a collection of residents.
To file a lien on homeowner association you have to file at the court house.
No, a homeowner association cannot answer a summons on behalf of an individual member. Each homeowner must respond to legal matters individually.
An activities coordinator plans and organizes activities usually for a nursing home or corporate setting. They can plan outings, exercise and parties.
Yes. You are legally obligated to pay homeowner association dues. As long as the homeowner's association was part of the public land records when you purchased your property you agreed to be bound by its terms and provisions. You need to review the recorded documents relating to your property.
If a homeowner's association notices a problem with a vacationing resident's house, and seeks to fix it during the resident's vacation, do they have liability?
Multiagency coordinator is an individual tasked with coordinating and administration of the activities of multiple business or other agencies
The governing documents for the association will hold the answer to your question: there is no standard answer.
You can avoid being in an association by not purchasing a home in one. If you own real estate in an association, you can sell your property.
Yes, a homeowner association or other homeowners in a community can take a homeowner to civil court for overdue assessment fees in Florida. The homeowner association or other homeowners would need to file a lawsuit against the homeowner, seeking a judgment for the unpaid fees. If successful, the court may order the homeowner to pay the overdue fees, as well as any associated legal costs or penalties.
yes
The association's treasurer can answer your question directly.
That depends on whether a former owner of your land agreed or arranged to make the property subject to the homeowner's association. The encumbrance would show up in a title examination. You should contact the attorney who represented you in the sale and ask if the property is subject to the homeowner's association. If it is that should have been reported to you at the time of your purchase.