Your answer depends on the context of the term 'liability'.
If it is used in the context of the association's financials, the treasurer or auditor can give you an answer.
In another context, you may need a realtor, or association manager or attorney to give you the answer you want.
This is not a legal answer; your answerer is not an attorney.If the association can verify that title remains in the developer's name, the association may be able to recover costs it has expended to keep up the common areas. Legal counsel is required to take action against the developer.The key element in your question is liability.You can ask your master insurance policy broker to verify that the association is paying premiums to cover liability in the common areas, and if indeed, as above, the title remains in the developer's name, the association should be able to pursue the developer to recover the costs of these premiums.The association's counsel can assist you, and answer your question in particular, given evidence the association can retrieve.
Yes, it is a current liability.
The loan is considered a liability - The value of the company is the equity.
Yes, you can deduct 401k contributions from your taxable income on your taxes, which can lower your overall tax liability.
Tax paid on purchases are considered a liability. Anything paid to another is considered a liability for businesses because they are spending money.
Without liability insurance, should there be any accident on the property, the association will be liable to pay for defending the claim, and potentially the claim for damages.Often the trade-off between liability insurance premiums and the hourly rate for defense attorneys indicate the it's less expensive to pay the liability insurance premiums.Your governing documents will help you define your requirement as an association insofar as carrying liability insurance is concerned. Usually, carrying it is mandatory.
If rent is payable then it is liability for business but if rent is already paid then it is not liability but it is expense.
Your association counsel or association CPA is best prepared to answer your specific question. There is no standard.
It is a liability
Accounts payable is considered a liability on a company's balance sheet.
A liability is anything owed to one company/person by another.If you owe money to someone it is a liability.
council has a play area currently closed. Playing Fields Association wish to assume liability, but Council insure.