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Dec 13, 2011

Communities throughout the Nation have been faced with the launch of a campaign called "Occupy Our Homes" (or O4O), which is a public showdown against big banks and public housing authorities.  This campaign is targeting for occupancy, units acquired by banks in the foreclosure process or government owned units and which are vacant.  These occupiers have been quoted as identifying vacant government or bank-owned homes, breaking into them and moving people into the units.  Their defense is that housing is a human right and therefore should be available for occupancy whether legally or not.

How could this development in the occupy movement affect your community?

An argument in favor of the occupation is that occupied units would be better maintained than would vacant units, thereby improving the appearance of the unit and thereby raising property values.  The big question is whether these type of occupiers would spend money for home maintenance in the first place.  A perceived detriment of this type of occupation is that homes would not be better maintained, would draw large groups of people occupying a single home, thereby creating more opportunity for civil disturbance and rule and covenant violations within the Community Association.  This latter concern would have a detrimental effect on property values and the quiet enjoyment of neighbors in the Community Association.

The Community Association should review its governing documents to ensure that there is an approval process in connection with the occupancy of a home, where the occupancy is not under a lease arrangement.  In essence, how would the governing documents address squatters in the units?  The association should contact its legal counsel for this answer.  There may be the need to amend the governing documents to better address this issue.

The Community Association confronted with an occupied home should contact the bank who owns the unit and demand that the bank dispossess the occupant as a trespasser in the unit and as a potential violator of the governing documents.  Jay Steven Levine Law Group plans to address this question at the time that the bank is seeking its Summary Final Judgment of Foreclosure to require banks to dispossess occupiers who are squatters (not tenants), and provide a direct remedy in favor of the association to secure a writ of possession as part of the bank foreclosure lawsuit.  It is not certain at this time whether the judges will recognize this potential problem and provide this needed remedy to an association.

Also, this situation should be reviewed by localities who have adopted vacant property ordinances whereby banks are required to provide upkeep and maintenance of units which are vacant and are involved in the bank foreclosure process.  Home owners may want to address their respective localities to ensure that applicable ordinances, if any, require banks to dispossess squatters from units which are in bank foreclosure and thereafter when the unit is vacant and still owned by the bank.

This article does not take a political stance as to the occupy movement or any related movement. 

By:  Jay Steven Levine, Esquire, founder of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, a full service community association and litigation practice, with offices in Boca Raton, Palm Beach Gardens and Sunrise.

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation. The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Sunrise, Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com. Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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Aug 12, 2011

Advanced Insurance Underwriters has invited Jay Steven Levine, Esquire of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group to present a two hour CAM course* on the subjects of hurricane, casualty and property damage to be held at Advanced Insurance Underwriters, 3250 North 29th Avenue, Hollywood, FL 33020 on August 25, 2011.  Lunch will be served compliments of Kevin Davis Insurance Services.

No further reservations are being taken at this time – seating capacity has been reached.

*Managers will receive CAM credit.  The license number for the presenter is PVD110.  The two hour course number is 9626162, in the “other” category.

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation. The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Aventura, Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com. Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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Aug 12, 2011

Jay Steven Levine , Esquire, the Principal of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, a community association and Florida commercial litigation law firm, is pleased to announce that he is an invited guest speaker at the Quarterly Board of Directors & Property Managers Seminar and Expo sponsored by Executive One Consultant Group on Thursday, September 8, 2011.  The Seminar and Vendor Expo will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, 1601 Belvedere Road, West Palm Beach, Florida. Jay Steven Levine will be presenting an informative one (1) hour CAM credit course on Assessment Collection.  The license number for the presenter is PVD110.  The one (1) hour CAM course number is 9626271 in the “other” category.

The keynote speaker at the Seminar and Expo will be Orly Amor, the author of “The Practical Approach to Property Management for our Times”.  Ms. Amor is also the President and CEO of the Executive One Consultant Group.

We invite you to contact Seminar and Expo representatives at (954) 977-8656 with questions and/or to RSVP.  For directions, to the Seminar and Expo, please call (888) 689-6892.

With over 30 years of experience in Florida community association law, Jay Steven Levine of Jay Steven Levine Law Group is Your Community PartnerSM.

About the Jay Steven Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation. The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined sixty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.
For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com. Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

 

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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Jun 14, 2011

Jay Steven Levine, Esquire, the Principal of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, a community association and Florida commercial litigation law firm, is pleased to announce that he is an invited guest speaker at the 16th Quarterly Board of Directors Seminar and Vendor Expo sponsored by Executive One Consulting Group on Tuesday June 21, 2011.  The Seminar and Vendor Expo will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Crowne Plaza Hotel at Sawgrass Mills, Sunrise, Florida. Jay Steven Levine will be discussing House Bill 1195, Senate Bill 408 and other new Florida legislation affecting community associations. 

The keynote speaker at the Seminar and Expo will be Orly Amor, the author of “The Practical Approach to Property Management for our Times”.  Ms. Amor is also the President and CEO of the Executive One Consulting Group.

We invite you to contact Seminar and Expo representatives at (954) 977-8656 with questions and/or to RSVP.  For directions, to the Seminar and Expo, please call (954) 851-1020.

With over 30 years of experience in Florida community association law, Jay Steven Levine of Jay Steven Levine Law Group is Your Community PartnerSM.

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation. The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Aventura, Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com. Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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Jun 08, 2011

Jay Steven Levine, Esq. of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, a full-service community association and commercial litigation law firm, is pleased to present a Board Member Certification Program covering the following topics:

o                  Budgets and Reserves,

o                  Condominium Operations,

o                  Elections,

o                  Records Maintenance, including Unit owner Access to Records, and

o                  Bids and Contracts.

We invite you to contact us for information on live seminars in varying locales throughout the State of Florida.  Visit us at www.jsllawgroup.com or call (561) 999-9925.  With over 30 years of experience in community association law, Jay Steven Levine is Your Community Partner

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation. The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Aventura, Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com. Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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florida community association lawyer


Mar 31, 2011

Questions often arise regarding minimum notice by the Board of Directors in adopting rules regarding unit (in the case of condominiums and cooperatives) or parcel (in the case of homeowner associations) use.  Can the minimum 48 hour notice be utilized since it is a Board meeting?  Are the proposed rules required to be affixed to the notice of the relevant meeting?   Well, the answer depends upon the governing documents.  First and foremost, ascertain and determine whether the Board has the authority to amend and adopt such rules.  Assuming the Board has the authority, consider that the law provides for a minimum 14 day notice prior to the respective meeting where rules regarding unit or parcel use will be considered.  For condominiums (718) and cooperatives (719), an affidavit attesting to compliance with the notice requirements is also required.  As for 718, 719 and homeowner associations (720), notice may be by mail, delivery or electronic notice (under certain circumstances) together with conspicuous posting of the notice on the property.  While the statute does provide minimum notice requirements, it does not mandate inclusion of the proposed rule in the meeting notice.  However, your governing documents may require more than just notice, such as a copy of the proposed rule to be delivered with the notice, which is not otherwise required by law.  The governing documents will control if such requirement is imposed.  The best approach is to confirm by checking your community governing documents for any variations to the minimum required by law.  In other words, one size does not fit all and for something as important as governing the conduct and actions of persons often living in close quarters, the best approach is the tailor made approach.

 

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation.  The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Aventura, Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com.  Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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Jul 23, 2010

Community Association  clients of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have questioned why should they be ready for a hurricane season when experts have for the past five years predicted a busy hurricane season which did not materialize.

We believe that this year will be more like the hurricane seasons of 2004 and 2005. 

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted for the 2010 hurricane season that there will be 14 to 23 named storms, 3 to 7 of which will be major storms, with winds in excess of 110 miles per hour.  Waters in the West Tropical Atlantic are abnormally warm – a factor for storm formation and strength.

Atmospheric conditions are more favorable to storm development and the probability of landfall in the United States, because the El Niño influence over the past few years which impedes storm development and keeps storms away from land is dissipating and instead there will be an influence from La Niña which tends to increase storm development and draw them toward land.

The Jay Steven Levine Law Group recommends that community associations not be complacent and instead be prepared.

                       

Condominium Association Unit Owner Insurance Coverage Obligations

The Jay Steven Levine Law Group is frequently asked to define the condominium unit owners' insurance coverage obligation.

The 2010 legislature adopted numerous amendments to the insurance provisions in the condominium statute addressing condominium unit owner insurance obligations, effective July 1, 2010.

The 2004 legislature required each unit owner to maintain property insurance coverage for the building components which were excluded from the condominium association coverage obligations.  The 2008 legislature deleted this requirement, suggesting that the owner was no longer obligated to carry insurance for those excluded items.  The insurance industry also took this position.  The 2010 legislature further addressed this question and provides that if the owner wishes to carry such coverage, it will be the responsibility of the owner to place and pay for the insurance.  However, such coverage is not mandatory.

The insurance code was amended to clarify that the coverage obligation of the condominium owner is limited to not less than $2,000.00 in property loss assessment coverage and dictates the maximum deductibles for such coverage. 

Owners are no longer required to provide proof of insurance to the condominium association -  a 2008 condominium law imposition that was burdensome to the entire management, association and insurance industries.  The association can no longer force place such insurance which associations could previously do under the 2008 condominium statute.

Condominium associations are no longer required to be additional named insureds and loss payees on property insurance policies issued to unit owners.

Finally, the 2010 law deleted a provision in the 2008 statute which obligated owners to carry insurance for improvements or additions which benefit the owner only.

 

Stay tuned for Part 5 of the 2010 Hurricane Season Guide: Condominium Association Reconstruction Obligations

 

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation.  The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com.  Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

Your Community Partner sm
florida community association lawyer

 


Jul 16, 2010

Community Association  clients of the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have questioned why should they be ready for a hurricane season when experts have for the past five years predicted a busy hurricane season which did not materialize.

We believe that this year will be more like the hurricane seasons of 2004 and 2005. 

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted for the 2010 hurricane season that there will be 14 to 23 named storms, 3 to 7 of which will be major storms, with winds in excess of 110 miles per hour.  Waters in the West Tropical Atlantic are abnormally warm – a factor for storm formation and strength.

Atmospheric conditions are more favorable to storm development and the probability of landfall in the United States, because the El Niño influence over the past few years which impedes storm development and keeps storms away from land is dissipating and instead there will be an influence from La Niña which tends to increase storm development and draw them toward land.

The Jay Steven Levine Law Group recommends that community associations not be complacent and instead be prepared.

BP Oil Spill 

The BP deepwater horizon oil spill provides an additional risk to Gulf state communities for this upcoming hurricane season.  Experts are predicting that the oil spill can be forced onto land creating an environmental disaster.  Recently, CNN aired a story stressing that should oil be forced onto the land, residents would be forced from their homes, and may not be able to return until the oil and contamination were cleaned up.  As a result, Gulf state communities should be that much more prepared in the event of such possibilities. 

The question is whether associations will be insured for oil spill damage.  Officials from the National Flood Insurance Program have indicated that oil damage to buildings and contents will be covered, but site contamination will not.  Community associations should realize that flood insurance covers damage only from rising water but not from wind-driven rain containing oil contamination.  Many (non-flood) property, casualty and windstorm policies contain exclusions from pollutants (which would include oil), and as such, these communities should discuss with their insurance agents whether there is coverage for oil stains on the property.

Stay tuned for Part 4 of the 2010 Hurricane Season Guide: Condominium Association Unit Owner Insurance Coverage Obligations

 

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation.  The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens, and by appointment in the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com.  Additional information may be found at: http://www.jsllawgroup.com

Association Law · Collections · Construction Defects · Casualty & Insurance Claims ·Contracts · Litigation

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florida community association lawyer

 


May 25, 2010

A very important but negative development has occurred for homeowners' associations seeking to collect past due assessments provided by Section 720.3085, Florida Statutes, from banks and other parties who bid and obtain title to lots/units at bank foreclosure sales, or who obtain a deed in lieu of foreclosure, because of the case of Coral Lakes Community Association, Inc. v. Busey Bank, N.A., 30 So.3d 579 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010) (Condominium associations are not affected by this ruling). 

In Coral Lakes, the court was faced with a declaration containing language which provided for no past due assessment liability to a bank or other high bidder at a mortgage foreclosure sale, or one who obtains a deed in lieu of foreclosure.  The court reasoned that a mortgage holder or other high bidder at a mortgage foreclosure sale or the holder of a first mortgage who obtains a deed in lieu of foreclosure is a third party beneficiary under and thereby entitled to protection of the declaration, and therefore, the statutorily imposed fee (of the lesser of 12 months of past due assessments or 1% of the original mortgage amount) would not apply to a mortgage dated prior to the effective date of the statute (July 1, 2008).  The court held that doing so would retroactively impair the mortgage which was dated prior to the effective date of the statute, and thereby would be an unconstitutional impairment of contract.  The court concluded that there was no past due assessment liability, citing the declaration as controlling, irrespective of the language imposing limited liability as described in Section 720.3085. 

Every homeowners association should know whether the Coral Lakes case will be problematic for the association.  In determining the applicability of the case, Jay Steven Levine Law Group reviews the date that the mortgage was signed to determine whether there is even an issue in favor of the mortgage holder.  Jay Steven Levine Law Group further reviews the governing declaration to determine whether there is a provision relieving mortgage holders and other persons obtaining title at bank foreclosure sales or by a deed in lieu of foreclosure. 

Jay Steven Levine Law Group recommends that a homeowners' association having facts (including declaration language) similar to Coral Lakes consider amending its declaration to eliminate the problematic language involved in the Coral Lakes case.  Though there is no guarantee that an amendment will operate to eliminate the issues raised in Coral Lakes, it is certainly a positive step in dealing with the negative impact of this case.

About the Jay Steven Levine Law Group
The Jay Steven Levine Law Group specializes in Florida community association law and Florida commercial litigation.  The lawyers at the Jay Steven Levine Law Group have over a combined fifty years of legal experience, maintaining offices in Boca Raton, Palm Beach Gardens, Fort Myers and by appointment in Naples and the Treasure Coast.

For more information about the Jay Steven Levine Law Group, please email jsl@jsllawgroup.com.  Additional information may be found at http://www.jsllawgroup.com


May 17, 2010

Senate Bill 1196 passed the 2010 Florida legislature and was sent to the Governor's desk today, May 17, 2010.  This Bill, if it becomes law will affect condominium, homeowners and cooperative associations.  The Governor has until June 1, 2010, within which to sign the Bill, veto it or take no action.  Even if the Governor takes no action, the Bill will still become law.  The effective date of the law is July 1, 2010.


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