When do banks pay fees for
condos in foreclosure?
Does a bank have to pay
maintenance fees on a property in foreclosureThese are questions from Sun
Sentinel readers. And we have answers with help from South Florida attorney
Lisa Magill of Becker & Poliakoff. If you have a question about Florida
shared community law you would like answered in print, please send an e-mail
with your full name and city name to dvasquez@SunSentinel.com.
Andre Deland of Margate
says his board is considering increasing monthly maintenance fees, or
passing a special assessment, to cover losses to the community's revenue
caused by homes in foreclosure. Deland believes the banks should pay the fees
on homes they have foreclosed. Should they?
- Daniel Vasquez - On Condos
The answer is no. "If
a home is in foreclosure, that means the foreclosure lawsuit is not complete
and the property hasn't changed hands," said Magill. "The non-paying
owner is still the owner and therefore still responsible for payment." If
the association cannot pay its bills, it must raise revenue through a special
assessment or another increase in the budget. Magill adds that recent case law
reiterates that the association cannot force a bank to pay for a property it
does not own. Once the bank becomes the owner, its responsibility to pay
current assessments is the same as any other owner. Both condo and HOA law also
require the bank to pay the lesser of 12 months worth of assessments, or 1
percent of the original mortgage, for the back-due assessments in addition to
the current charges. A condominium association is entitled to file a lien if
the bank doesn't pay within 30 days of a written demand. An HOA can file a lien
if the bank doesn't pay what it owes within 45 days of written demand.
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