Since maintaining the property costs money that owners provide, owners may not be willing to have their assessment dollars spent that way.
This issue merits an agenda item at a board meeting and an open discussion with owners.
The answer depends on the details. It depends on whether the maintenance is mentioned in the documents that created the Association. For example, developers make different types of reciprocal agreements with towns in order to get approval for their plans. A developer may agree to make the HOA responsible for maintaining an abutting recreation/conservation area that belongs to the town in exchange for allowing its members the free use of the property. The first place you should check is in the documents that created the association.
Yes, community property takes precedence. The estate cannot do something with property that does not belong to them.
Generally no. In separate and community property states inherited property remains separate property as long as you take care to not co-mingle it with marital property. Don't use your spouse's money to renovate an inherited house. You should check with an attorney in your state who can review the situation and explain your options.
Wealth is created by funneling the resources that should belong to everyone, such as money and property, into the hands of an
Your first expense will be the cost of the property. The next expense will be your assessment, which the association uses as income to cover the costs of operating the community. Since every community is unique and different from every other community, there is no standard cost for either a property or regular assessments.
One contributing factor is whether the married couple resided in a community property state. If that is the case, the surviving spouse is usually responsible for all spousal debts regardless of how the account was held. If not a community property state, the debts belong to the deceased only, and should be handled according to state probate laws.
Kanker surname belongs to which community
No. In the United States there are ten community property states: Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin. Alaska is an opt-in community property state; property is separate property unless both parties agree to make it community property through a community property agreement or a community property trust.
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no
Yes, If the debts were incurred outside a community property state during marriage, the collection can be enforced. All it takes is the signature of one of the spouses to 'bind the community'. Where the marriage occurred is not relevant, all states recognize legal marriages performed in other states. However, if the debt(s) belong to only one of the couple before the marriage then the community property laws would apply only to debts and/or property incurred in CA. There could be grounds for appeal regarding the enforcement of community property laws under these conditions.
Property of addition.