Legal Question in Construction Law in California

law suits against homebuilder

Live in a community in Coroan Ca and we have been notified by our association that all homeowners in the community must pay 700.00 each to have our roads repaired in the community. The association is suing the builders because they are at fault and the roads are sinking. Since the builders are not responding the association wants us all to pay for this repair. They have given us until Oct 1 to pay. I asked them that if they do win this case will the association reinburse the homeowners for this money and their reply was NO. It will come off your HOA dues. (our HOA's are 44.00 per month) Can the homeowners either sue the builders (Class Action) for this money or is the community responsible for this. Please help.


Asked on 9/24/05, 2:24 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Carl Starrett Law Offices of Carl H. Starrett II

Re: law suits against homebuilder

Under California law, it is the association's duty to maintain and repair the common areas unless the CC&Rs say differently. The association is legally required to collect regular and special assessments to carry out the duties required under the law. And by statute, only the association has standing to sue for construction defects related to the common areas.

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Answered on 9/24/05, 6:26 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: law suits against homebuilder

In a purely theoretical sense, the individual homeowners could perhaps file and maintain a class action suit against the builder.

There are several real-world obstacles to such a suit. First, the HOA is perhaps irrevocably the agent of the individual owners for such matters. You would have to read your HOA Agreement and the CC&Rs. Second, since the builder contracted with the developer and not the individual owners, the latter are (at best) third-party beneficiaries of any express or implied warranties in the original construction contracts. Third, a court would have to certify the class-action suit, and would be reluctant to do so if a single-plaintiff suit by the HOA would address the same claims more efficiently.

You and other owners who disapprove of the HOA's proposed handling might want to get together to have a local attorney with some common-development real estate law experience review this HOA's foundational documents to see what he or she thinks of your chances and rights, but my guess as an outsider is that a suit by the HOA is more appropriate and more efficient.

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Answered on 9/24/05, 4:58 pm


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