| Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
|
From: David Clements and Evan Richardson (evdavwes |
|
| Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2012 05:15:39 -0700 (PDT) | |
Thanks for bringing up the topic. I am not a lawyer, but would love to hear
input from any lawyers about this.
For our community ( www.westwoodcohousing.com ), the responsibility of the
Board was defined in our original declaration and bylaws as everything other
than approving the amount of the annual budget and assessments and electing the
Board, which authority is reserved to the members. In this respect, our HOA
(Homeowners Association) is set up like the other 99% of HOAs that are not
cohousing. So we have a huge potential for conflict, since many (but not
necessarily all) residents assume that in cohousing the members themselves
should have significant authority for many aspects of community life, rather
than just electing a Board and turning over their authority to the Board. .
We have had conflicts related to the Board being perceived as doing "too much,"
when it exercises the authority given to it in the bylaws, and doing "too
little," when members of the Board assume that they do not have the authority,
and fail to act or defer to members.
I have come to feel that the most important way to minimize this kind of
conflict, for communities that have a small elected Board (as opposed to
communities where many or all members are legally on the Board), is to be very
clear about what authority they want the Board to have. In our state (NC) this
would involve including in the declaration any authority that we might want to
give to members which is usually given "by default" to the Board. For example,
the authority to create rules and regulations. The NC Planned Community Act
specifies that the Board has the authority to create rules "by default," unless
the declaration specifies otherwise. If we want the members to have the
authority to create rules and regulations, we need to specify this in the
declaration. We have not actually done this, although historically the only
rules and regulations we have ever adopted have been by member decision rather
than Board decision. We have thus left ourselves open to a legal challenge
based on the fact that our rules were not properly adopted. (Knock on wood, no
one has challenged the rules yet.)
The Board has a "fiduciary responsibility" to the owners and the HOA. One
aspect of this fiduciary responsibility is that the Board carry out any
responsibilities given to it by the members/owners. These responsibilities are
typically detailed in the declaration and bylaws. If the Board feels that some
of the things specified in the declaration are not in the best interest of the
community, the Board still has the responsibility to carry out the
responsibilities. To fail to carry out the responsibility is by definition a
violation of the Board's fiduciary duty. If the Board determines that an
existing provision in the declaration is unwise or imprudent, the only action
the Board can take consistent with its fiduciary responsibility is to convince
the members to change the declaration, and meanwhile continue to enforce the
provision.
For example, if the declaration specifies a "pet policy" (as some declarations
do) saying that pets over 50 pounds are prohibited, and the Board tolerates or
allows a 60-pound dog on the property, the Board is violating its fiduciary
responsibility to owners. Even if the Board determines that a different pet
policy is in the best interests of the community.
Another example: Conventional wisdom says that for HOA Boards, investing HOA
funds in any instrument that may lose value, such as Municipal Bonds, reflects
poor business judgment and is thus a violation of fiduciary responsibility to
the owners. The members of a Board which approves such an investment are
individually vulnerable to a lawsuit from owners to recover personally from
them any amount lost because of their action. However, if the range of
permitted investments is specified in the Declaration or Bylaws, and the Board
invests according to the policy, the Board's actions by definition carry out
its fiduciary responsibility.
The concept of "fiduciary responsibility" applies whenever a Trustee or elected
Board makes decisions on behalf of individuals or owners. It does not apply to
decisions the individuals or owners make for themselves. There is no legally
enforceable requirement that owners, when acting as a group on their own
behalf, make "good" or "sound" decisions.
I have heard the opinion that the HOA owner/members should not make financial
decisions for themselves because they have no "fiduciary responsibility" to
themselves: only the Board has a fiduciary responsibility to the owners, and
therefore the Board will make "more responsible" decisions -- so the argument
goes. I think this argument misses one main point of cohousing: That it is a
legitimate choice for people to govern themselves, rather than to elect a
government and turn over their power to them. Self-governance may not always
be pretty or easy, and many people may reasonably choose not to live this way.
But for those who do, it can be deeply satisfying and often exhilarating. For
those who prefer to have an elected Board make decisions for them, there are
plenty of other places to live (the other 99%).
David Clements
Message: 3
Date: Wed, 4 Jul 2012 09:40:06 -0700
From: "Norman Gauss" <normangauss [at] charter.net>
Subject: [C-L]_ Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the
Community
To: "'Cohousing-L'" <cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org>
Message-ID: <01d601cd5a03$abad5e80$03081b80$@charter.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
Our community has a long history of trying to minimize arbitrary actions by
the Board of Directors. The feeling is that, in cohousing, the whole
community should be making important decisions. The literature is replete
with stories of domineering Boards lowering the boom on the HOA without any
recourse from the membership.
However, in California, the whole community may make ill-advised decisions
with legal impunity that may make living here potentially hazardous with
respect to personal safety, susceptibility to fires, termite infestation,
attacks by dogs, access to emergency vehicles, and preventative measures
minimizing the need for special assessments. But the whole community does
not have fiduciary responsibilities for its members and cannot be held
liable for negligence or purposely making decisions based on personal
preferences of a few members.
The Board of Directors, being a fiduciary body, legally cannot let personal
interests of its members be a basis for its decisions. It must have the
welfare of the community in mind rather than the welfare of its members. If
found to have been negligent or to have purposely made decisions that were
not in the best interests of the community, it can be accused of malfeasance
and liable to be sued. Our membership is uncomfortable with the Board
making unilateral decisions and is not willing to give the Board leeway to
act in the best interests of the HOA.
Does this type of conflict exist in other cohousing communities?
Norman Gauss
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community, (continued)
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Mariana Almeida, July 5 2012
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Norman Gauss, July 8 2012
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Mariana Almeida, July 8 2012
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Sharon Villines, July 9 2012
-
Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Sharon Villines, July 8 2012
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Norman Gauss, July 8 2012
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community davidaclements2, July 9 2012
- Re: Fiduciary Responsibilities - Taking Care of the Community Sharon Villines, July 9 2012
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.