Not normally. Often governing documents tighten state laws.
Without more information, however, this answer can only be a best guess.
AnswerCondominium Master Deeds are generally written according to the provisions of state law. The chapter is generally cited somewhere in the beginning of the instrument. For example, a Master Deed in Massachusetts would state the following in the declaration:
Ramsey Lewis and Quincy Jones, being the owners of the land in fee simple more particularly described in Exhibit A, do hereby submit such land . . . to the provisions of Chapter 183A and do hereby state that the property shall be subject to each and all of the terms hereof and of said Chapter 183A . . . . Owners of condominium projects do not have the authority to over-ride state laws.
Wording in condominium lease contract says the master deed takes precedent over all underlining documents. The master plan and unit deed are based off this document.
The state laws will be applied over and above the contract. A contract cannot violate the law at any level of jurisdiction.
No. BTW, state and federal regulations take precedent over local zoning ordinances if they are more stringent.
Jennifer was ecstatic over closing on her new condominium.
The local building code can give you the answer you seek, depending on which Vancouver is the location of the condominium.
About like over quite a few million a year...
A principle that takes precedent over the laws of society.
Header files in Turbo C serve the same purposes they serve in every other implementation of the C programming language. The primary function is to separate interfaces (declarations) from implementations (definitions). This is useful whenever we have interfaces that are common to more than one translation unit. Rather than repeatedly typing out the same declarations over and over, we can simply include the header or headers that contain those declarations. The include statements force the compiler to copy the contents of the named file in place, thus ensuring the declarations are consistent throughout our program.
Depends on which court you filed it.
In USA, and possibly in other locales, condominium is unique to a form of real estate ownership. A condominium community is governed by a set of governing documents that usually defines a board of directors who operate the corporation, and more. In a cooperative society, there is no implied definition of real estate ownership, and the over-arching foundation is that everybody agrees about everything. A condominium can be regarded as a private democracy, where owners vote on some items, and board votes generally define action that is taken by the corporation.
A 'green condominium' may be a condominium project built with assets focused on sustainability. Assets may include solar panels, rain-water capture mechanisms, native landscapes that require less water, even water-purification systems, perhaps, for using grey water to irrigate the golf course. There is no standard; the Public Offering Statement will describe the extent of 'green' in a condominium project. Then, governing documents including board meeting minutes will educate you in how the administration of the 'green' assets has progressed over time.
It is possible that both entities -- the association and the mortgage holder -- have vested, monetary interests in a condominium unit.There may be no 'priority' as to which entity forecloses first, but your state law may dictate which entity occupies the 'priority' position insofar as the distribution of funds are concerned when the property is sold.A local, association-savvy attorney can answer the specifics of your question.AnswerGenerally, a lender will make certain there are no outstanding condominium fees or assessments due before granting the mortgage. The banks require a certificate of no unpaid charges as part of any mortgage transaction. That is the main purpose of the title examination performed for any property that is the subject of a pending mortgage, i.e., to make certain there are no prior encumbrances. The lender wants to make certain it's lien is senior.If a lien arises for unpaid condominium fees or assessments after a mortgage is granted, the lien is subject to the mortgage. If the condominium forecloses on a condominium lien for a unit that is subject to a prior mortgage, the condominium would acquire the unit subject to the mortgage.