I feel like I handled a thousand annual meetings in the last
month, flying from one to the other. When running the
meetings, and depending upon whether the association is a
condominium or HOA, it is important to know if the person
running for the board, or even the winner of the election,
is eligible to serve because they owe money to the
association.
Let’s start with condominiums first, Florida Statute 718.112
(2)(d) states:
A
person who has been suspended or removed by the division
under this chapter, or who is delinquent in the payment of
any assessment due to the association, is not
eligible to be a candidate for board membership and may not
be listed on the ballot.
So, in a
condominium, the person’s eligibility to run and initially
serve on the board is decided when the owner submits their
notice to be a candidate, and that is no less than 40 days
before the election. If at that time, the owner is
delinquent in any assessment their name cannot
be printed on the ballot and sent to the unit owners. On
the night of the election the association need not worry if
anyone is delinquent and cannot serve because their name was
already excluded from the ballot.
The law
in a Florida HOA is much different. Florida Statute
720.306(9)(b) states:
A
person who is delinquent in the payment of any fee, fine,
or other monetary obligation to the association on the
day that he or she could last nominate himself or herself or
be nominated for the board may not seek election to the
board, and his or her name shall not be listed on the
ballot.
Lots of differences between the two statutes here. In a
condominium, you can only be prevented from being placed on
the ballot if you owe an assessment. In an HOA, your name
can be prevented from being placed on the ballot if you owe
any fee, fine or other monetary obligation to the
association; a far more restrictive provision in an HOA.
In addition, remember that in most HOAs, nominations are
taken from the floor on the night of the election. That is
the “day that he or she could last nominate himself or
herself or be nominated for the board.” Therefore, on
the night of the election, we need to know if any of the
proposed nominees owe any fee, fine or other monetary
obligation. If so, their name cannot be accepted into
nomination. They cannot run.
ONCE A DIRECTOR BECOMES 90 DAYS DELINQUENT
The Condominium Act states:
718.112: Director or officer delinquencies.—A
director or officer more than 90 days delinquent in the
payment of any monetary obligation due the
association shall be deemed to have abandoned the office,
creating a vacancy in the office to be filled according to
law.
The Homeowners Association Act states:
720.306(9)(b) A person
serving as a board member who becomes more than 90 days
delinquent in the payment of any fee, fine, or other
monetary obligation to the association shall be deemed
to have abandoned his or her seat on the board, creating a
vacancy on the board to be filled according to law.