Reston’s Shadowood condominiums make new Va. case law, can’t fine
owners for rule violations
The Washington Post
By: Tom Jackman
13 December 2012
UPDATE, Monday, 9 a.m.: In Saturday’s condo board elections,
Shadowood’s owners defeated both the incumbent secretary and treasurer,
replacing them with two new officers. The next election, for board
president Olivia, is in March.
ORIGINAL POST: In Reston, there is a condominium complex called
Shadowood that has written itself into Virginia history. For years, the
Shadowood Condominium Association imposed fees for things like calling
the management office or having the wrong color blinds. It towed
tenants’ cars for unpaid fees — on the day before Thanksgiving. It
turned off the heat or air conditioning to apartments of owners who
were in arrears or in violation of its many rules.
Last year, a Fairfax County judge permanently enjoined Shadowood from
doing any of that stuff. The association appealed to the state Supreme
Court, using its own members/victims’ money to pay its lawyers. This
summer they lost there too, enshrining Shadowood in Virginia law under
the concept that you can’t make up rules and impose fees if they are
not in the development’s original master deed. That ruling has
earth-shaking consequences for thousands of condo associations across
the state, real estate lawyers say.
So many of the owners of the 450 condos in Shadowood, at the
intersection of South Lakes and Soapstone drives, are interested in
changing their association leadership. But the officers who run
Shadowood, in particular longtime board president Brian Olivia, are
still in charge. An election is scheduled for two of the five officers
on Saturday, but with an interesting set of rules for who may run, and
it will be interesting to see if the vote changes anything.
Olivia is the target of a lot of ire, but he defends his positions
calmly and in detail. He, and his lawyers, believed that state law
allowed condo associations to impose fees in order to keep people from
dumping trash or paying late, but that the Virginia courts reached a
new, different view. Now, Olivia says, he has no way to enforce the
rules in Shadowood, late fees are not being charged, and “it’s the Wild
West around here.”
“This guy thinks this is his plantation,” said condo owner Mario
Olivero. “We are just there to provide money.” Owners pay between $287
and $324 a month for maintenance, which provides Shadowood about $1.5
million in basic income. Olivero said his car was once towed, before
dawn, on the day that his license plate registration expired. “I don’t
want to know how many hundreds of thousands of dollars they’ve paid in
legal bills.”
And owners don’t know such things, some said, because Olivia rebuffs
requests from owners to see the association’s financial records.
Shadowood did, however, provide a recent audit of its books to a state
agency which oversees these associations, and it said there was no
documentation for a $2.1 million contracting job, and that Olivia had
been paid $75,000 for “consulting services.”
Words such as “intimidation” and “fear” cropped up frequently in
conversations with numerous owners on Wednesday. Longtime owner Daniel
Chambers, who sold his unit in June after 30 years, said “the fear felt
by Shadowood owners is best exemplified by the Shadowood envelope in
their mailbox. Nothing good ever came in a Shadowood envelope...the
next thought was ‘How much is the Board going to get out of me this
time? 'For years owner fines were a dependable flow of supplemental
revenue.”
Shadowood’s first buildings opened in 1974, and the complex built up
gradually until 1979. As with all condo developments, there is a master
deed that dictates how the place will be run.
Shadowood’s master deed said in 1974 that the Shadowood Condominium
Association shall assess a monthly fee for maintenance only, and “no
common expenses or other sums shall be assessed” for any other reasons.
Changing that deed requires not only 100 percent agreement among the
owners but also among those who hold the mortgages, which makes change
virtually impossible.
For many years, Fairfax County has been one of the largest condo owners
in Shadowood, having bought 16 units back in 1975 to rent to low-income
folks. But when their tenants began having problems with fines and
fees, the amounts quickly added up. In one month of 2010, Fairfax
County was told it had rung up more than $10,000 in fees, for having
incomplete forms on file, making improper calls to the management
office and having invalid parking stickers. A Fairfax housing official
tried to attend a hearing to challenge, brought a court reporter with
her, and was ejected, court records show.
The county said a number of its tenants’ cars were towed on
Thanksgiving morning one year despite discussions about pending
obligations. Olivia said Fairfax had been late paying its bills, had
been given a grace period granted to no one else, and still wouldn’t
pay on time. He said utility bills needed to be paid for the entire
complex, and all owners needed to pay their share. He said “parking
privileges were suspended” and the vehicles towed on the day before
Thanksgiving, not Thanksgiving morning.
Olivia and his lawyers pointed to a Virginia law, which said such
associations shall have the power to “suspend a unit owner’s right to
use facilities and services, including utility services” for
nonpayment, and to ”assess charges against any unit owner” for any
violation of condo rules. But the law adds a clause saying the
associations may do so “to the extent the condominium instruments or
rules” allow. Bellows found that Shadowood’s 1974 master deed didn’t
allow it.
Shadowood appealed to the Virginia Supreme Court, which upheld Bellows
in July of this year. Though it was an unpublished opinion, “it’s a
game-changer” for perhaps 10,000 condo and homeowner associations
across Virginia, according to Pia Trigiani, an Alexandria lawyer with
extensive expertise in community association law, and recent president
of the Virginia Bar Association.
“Every association needs to evaluate what their governing documents
grant them the authority to do,” Trigiani said. “And to the extent that
association has in place a rigorous rule enforcement program, they’re
going to need to think of how this case impacts them....It is a lawyer
feast day. They are making it impossible for these volunteer
associations to operate without a lawyer.”
Which brings us back to Shadowood. Olivia felt like he and his board
were merely trying to enforce rules to keep the place neat and orderly.
Now, “we don’t have an effective means of enforcing our rules. We have
to expect people are following the rules. They’re not.” He said
Shadowood now couldn’t even charge a late fee or interest for late
monthly maintenance payments.
Other owners felt Olivia was too rigid in maintaining discipline,
though he noted there were due process hearings for every violation and
the condo board showed compassion where appropriate.
Some haven’t felt the compassion.
Susan Zhou said Olivia was “very rude” in her hearing, where she was
assessed $200 for failing to switch her automatic monthly payment to a
new collector. “They do everything in their power to make it difficult
for everyone else,” Zhou said. “A very very strange place.”
“It’s just turned out to be the worst two years of my entire life,”
said owner Gerard Moseley, whose apartment was virtually destroyed by a
burst pipe in a common attic area above his unit in 2010. He said
Shadowood refused to submit his claim to its insurance company, and he
now lives in about 300 of the 1000 square feet of his condo.
Olivia said Moseley’s insurance company was responsible for repairing
the damage to his unit, not the other 449 owners paying for the
property’s liability insurance. The burst pipe was not caused by
Shadowood, and so it should not have to pay for Moseley’s repairs.
Olivia, who noted he and the other directors are unpaid, sent over a
two-page list of the condo board’s accomplishments in the last three
years, including electric heat pumps in all 450 units and extensive
exterior improvements.
But the court case and the years of financial penalties have generated
a lot of resentment. So now comes Saturday’s election for two new board
members, and a set of rules sent to possible candidates last month,
including: “have no past, pending, probable or current litigation”
against Shadowood and “have no more than three Shadowood governing
document violations” in the past year.
This raised some eyebrows among the disgruntled owners. But Olivia said
they were only voluntary guidelines, suggested by the association’s
lawyer, and that several of the candidates already lined up to run are
involved in lawsuits but are still on the ballot.
Jim Peters, an owner who wants new management, said Shadowood’s
financial records were still being “concealed,” which he theorized was
connected to the “extraordinary legal embarrassment and the court
striking down our fines and late fee income. Shadowood’s owners should
not have to vote from a position of ignorance.”
Peters added, “I’m afraid that so many owners will show up Saturday
morning, hopeful for a new direction and brighter future, that we won’t
all fit inside the clubhouse.”
Reader's Comments
Vote Them Out
12/23/2012
UPDATE on the SHADOWOOD CONDO REGIME after DEC 15 ELECTION.
Board Secretary voted off the Board of Directors by est/ 70% vote
Board Treasurer voted off the Board of Directors by est 70% vote
Board President (Brian) removed as President after 9 years in position.
Board President (Brian) removed as "Chair of Legal Committee" which
resulted in the VA Supreme Court Case against Association. Committee
eliminated.
Board VP removed as VP Position. Now Assistant Secretary
Alan K rremains Board Resolution and Conciliation Officer. No word on his status. K is a non-voting, appointed board officer.
powercorruptsabsolutepower
12/20/2012
Burt: There are many good HOA's all over the US providing houses for
"first time buyers". HOAs and the CIC Boards are only 60% of the
problem -- it's the same type all over the US condo-land.
The owners who allow the Board members unlimited power via apathy is the other 40%.
The result is the 800 punnd gorilla in the china shop. Then, see how hard it is to get the Gorilla Board under control?
Tom Jefferson said: "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance". In
condos, owners are too trusting and too willing to let others work for
nothing as "volunteer" members of the Associations. Jefferson also
said: "Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestuous sea of
liberty". But my favorite in terms of the "old" Shadowood Board is,
"When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the
government fears the people, there is liberty."
The Shadowood Board never feared the owners. It was the owners who
feared the Board's Leadership until the VA Supreme Court ruling yanked
the teeth from the tiger's mouth.
powercorruptsabsolutepower
12/15/2012
All of the 155 comments should know, and also, Alan K. that his
president boss and 2 incumbert board members were soundly defeat by the
Shadowood Owners. The democratic process works fine-Mr. Alan.
Both the Board Secretary and the Finacial Directors lost by a landslide.
Any Condo Board President who gets awarded a sweetheart deal of $75,000
to oversee the installation of the HVAC system in the association, when
the President has no credentials should be removed for self-dealing.
With the defeat of the President's majority today, President Olivia may
lose his gravel before he voluntarily resigns.
murray
12/15/2012
I once took over an HOA when homeowners came to me as asked me to help them.
The former board didn't call for elections, stole all the money in our
accounts (probably around 40K), and tried to hide the thefts. Call the
police you say? We did--and couldn't even get them to send an officer
to take a report. I called the DA. He laughed and showed no interest in
pursuing our complaint whatsoever. "This is all your problem," he told
me.
The reason I was asked to do this is because I had been president of a
much larger HOA for a while. In that capacity I caught one of our board
members trying to engineer a kickback from a dredging contractor we
were seeking to hire to work on a large pond we had in the community.
He reported a $50K expense--but the next day, I called the same
contractor and had the work done for $10K--he revealed that he had been
pressured by our board member to inflate the prince--but to nothing
else.
The police weren't interested in this either.
I can tell you with certainty that any group of residents who pays
hundreds of dollars a month to buy pansies for the front
entrance--these people are being ripped off.
You would be amazed to see how quickly normal folks become megalomanical thieves and con-artists. Imagine what corruption exists
in higher (much) government. Did I say 'imagine'? No imagination is
required--only the ability to read.
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