Constitutional Local Governments

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I am a nationmally recognized homeowner rights advocate, and author of "Establishing the New America of independent HOA principalities."

Wednesday, September 15, 2004

The HOA Citizen 2003-2004 Article Archive Index

Please click here for a list of The HOA Citizen articles for 2003 -2004.
More information about this FREE monthly newsletter on important homeowner advocacy topics, see CITIZEN.

Friday, September 03, 2004

Private Communities and Societal Norms

In 1992, when planned communities came under heavy criticism and CAI resorted to an intensive lobbying effort, a Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law paper by Todd Brower said the following, among other things:

"By creating distinct community norms and amenities, common interest developments promote the value of private autonomy and personal liberty ... Therefore, the ability to structure one's private environment and to create a shelter from society [in which any goes] becomes particularly valuable, especially in and around the home".

This holds true today when most HOA residents want to control who can do what next door to maintain property values. But the author continues with,

"Accordingly, to provide this separate sheltered environment. residential association regulations have pervaded community life ... residential associations have the power to enter an individual's home to inspect for violations of residential restrictions and may forcibly expel a non-conforming member from the community ... the personal autonomy of some individuals entails joining other like-minded persons in homogeneous communities which must then suppress the individualism of its members to preserve the counter-culture nature of the association. Thus, sometimes personal autonomy and individual liberty in common ownership situations intrude upon other substantive societal values."

In other words, we must play by the rules for the benefit of property values and to do this the HOA must take away your rights and freedoms. And, the courts have accepted this proposition that you fully agreed to surrender your rights. Brower adds, "The essential premise of a residential private government is that it is fully consensual ... this assumption is problematic".

What has happened, we may ask, in the ensuing 12 years to allow the Arizona Legislature, and other state legisaltures, to pass laws like, taking away the homestead protection, not providing constitutional due process, and allowing HOA attorneys to highly profit from an abuse of the legal system in regard to HOA foreclosures and fines?

Surely, not the influence of the CAI's, non-enemy, lobbying efforts and the failure of homeowners to effectively organize opposition.

Thursday, September 02, 2004

The Legitimacy of HOA Governance

"To prevent the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity do ordain and establish these CC&R constitutions for HOAs"

[The following is based on Randy Barnett's book, "Restoring the Lost Constitution", and the 9th amendment. Just scale down from national level to the HOA community level -- it's the same principle at work.]

The 9th Amendment

"The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people".

What makes a government legitimate? What makes a law/rule legitimate? When is a person morally bound to obey a law/rule? He answers,

"A constitution that lacks adequate procedures to ensure the justice of valid laws is illegitimate even if it was consented to by a majority ... constitutional legitimacy can even be seen as a product of procedural assurances that legal commands are not unjust"."A law may be 'valid' because it was produced in accordance with all the procedures required by a particular lawmaking system, but be 'illegitimate' because these procedures were inadequate to provide assurances that a law is just".

And he speaks of justice by explaining, "the founders' view that 'first come rights, and then comes the Constitution'. The rights that precede the formation of government they call 'natural rights' ... For these are rights that the people possess before they form a government and therefore retain; they are not positive rights created by government"."

Natural rights define a private domain within which persons may do as they please, provided their conduct does not encroach upon the rightful domain of others. As long as their actions remain within the rightful domain, other persons -- including persons calling themselves government officials -- should not interfere without a compelling justification".

And, more directly relating to HOAs where homeowners are assumed to have given their unanimous consent to be governed by the HOA,"If there are some rights that cannot be waived or transferred even by the consent of the right-holders, then the unanimous consent regimes [supposedly HOAs], to be legitmate, must offer procedural assurances that these inalienable rights have been protected".

In other words, these inalienable rights are independent of any form of government and that a legitimate government cannot take away or restricted. And this is why I cannot over emphasize the important of arguments based on fundamental principles of American government in our efforts to obtain justice.And this is our biggest problem in fighting HOA governance and its legitimacy over homeowners. This bypasses the important question of contractual consent.

Why shouldn't HOAs be considered local governments?

While I can understand why CAI wishes to keep the current focus that HOAS are contractual and therefore not a government, I believe that any attempt to get equality and justice, cannot be accomplished by a private adhesion contract in favor of money making developers, without a bill of right and without the protection of the US Constitution.

CAI even admits that CC&RS can be judged as adhesion contracts by the courts (as prime designers of the UCIOA they included Section 1.112 that deals with what issues the courts may consider when deciding on the unconscionablility of CC&Rs). Anyone who has read the history of planned communites will immediately see that the intent was not to establish a better form of government leading to a higher degree of domestic tranquility or improved general welfare, but to put $$$ in the pockets of the real estate interests. Maybe that's why there's little support for a full written disclosure about living in an HOA.

Every state legislature has the power today to make this happen with a very simple bill. If this were to happen, as it should, we would not be seeing all these efforts at state legislatures to right unjust laws that support private organizations and that restrict the rights anf freedoms of citizens. And, CIA attorneys and management firms would cease to exist, or be subject to the oversight of state agencies as they should be.

Well, keeping it simple, here's how Black's Law Dictionary (6th Ed.) defines a government? Note: The term "political unit" means the same as a territory or area with boundaries; such as, country, state, province, county, city, town, village, district, etc. "politics", the decison-making process of a group of people.

"That form of fundamental rules and principles by which a nation or state is governed, or by which individual members of a body politic are to regulate their social behavior"."government by de facto: a government of fact, a body actually exercising power and control as opposed to the true and lawful government; a government NOT established according to the constitution".

And, in Black's discussion of the meaning of "state" [my emphasis],

"A state or political society is an association of human beings established for the attainment of certain ends by certain means ....What then is the difference between this and other forms of government? The difference is clearly one of function. The state must be defined by reference to such of its activities and purposes as are essential and characteristic".


"Modern states are territorial; their governments exercise control over persons and things within their frontiers ...."

Planned communities are territorial, also. Their "citizens" must pay assessments and are subject to fines, penalties and loss of property if they fail to obey the "authorities", the HOA board, and many times, the hired mercenaries, the HOA management firms. As for the legitimacy of the authority, the state receives it from the state constitution that was granted under the US Constitution. Citizens do not have to sign a document to be bound by these constitutions, but HOAs require a contract because they have no legal authority without the contract. This contract and its provisons, backed by statutes and court rulings, make the HOA a de facto government, a state actor. But, as presented above, definitely not a legitimate government where its members have an moral obligation to obey the rules and regulations.

Why shouldn't HOAs be a local government under the American political system with its protection of our rights, freedoms and liberties? Isn't that what Amnerica stands for?