Perhaps someone in this group can assist me with this question: May a condominium association require unit owners to maintain the equivalent of homeowners’ insurance on their units? I know Florida has a statute on this, but this condo is in Pennsylvania.
The Declaration permits but does not require unit owners to insure their units. Many of the units are not mortgaged, and some owners are not carrying insurance.
The Executive Board’s concern is that a fire or water leak, for example, within a unit may cause damage to either the common areas or other units, and there may not be recourse if there is no property damage insurance.
Thank you for your guidance.
On Jul 22, 2021, at 9:03 PM, Max Lieberman <mlieb...@lslaw.com> wrote:
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I understand what a condominium is. But condo owners can obtain insurance similar to homwowners or tenants insurance that covers them for loss of contents, personal liability, and property damage to others. That is what we are interested in.
Max L. Lieberman, Esquire
Max L. Lieberman & Associates, P.C.
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On Jul 22, 2021, at 7:13 PM, Nina Whitehurst <ni...@cumberlandlegacylaw.com> wrote:
The individual owners only own airspace. The association owns the building. The individual owners do not have an insurable interest in the building.
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On Jul 22, 2021, at 10:12 PM, Nina Whitehurst <ni...@cumberlandlegacylaw.com> wrote:
The individual owners only own airspace. The association owns the building. The individual owners do not have an insurable interest in the building.
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Thank you, Cliff. It is your point 5 that I am asking about.
Max L. Lieberman, Esquire
Max L. Lieberman & Associates, P.C.
591 Skippack Pike, Suite 400
Blue Bell, Pennsylvania 19422-2160
Tel: (610) 397-1820 Fax: (610) 397-1821
mlieb...@lslaw.com | www.lslaw.com
From: nyclar...@googlegroups.com <nyclar...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Clifford Treese
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2021 11:15 PM
To: nyclar...@googlegroups.com
Cc: Clifford J. Treese <cliffor...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [nyclarealprop] Condo Law Question
The given condominium is confused concerning the insurance issue presented in the email.
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Thank you. Yes, lenders require it, and it would be wise for a unit owner to carry it even when there is no loan, but can the Condo Board require it when there is no loan?
Max L. Lieberman, Esquire
Max L. Lieberman & Associates, P.C.
591 Skippack Pike, Suite 400
Blue Bell, Pennsylvania 19422-2160
Tel: (610) 397-1820 Fax: (610) 397-1821
From: nyclar...@googlegroups.com <nyclar...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Wendy Yu
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2021 10:38 PM
To: nyclar...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [nyclarealprop] Condo Law Question
In NY, especially NYC, it is unusual not to have homeowners insurance. Most condo unit owners will have their own homeowners insurance for their unit in addition to the condo’s master insurance due to the concerns you mentioned, fire, water leaks, etc.
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Having discussed the nature of condominium ownership and the type of insurance, we get down to the actual question: can such insurance be required by fiat of the executive board?
It's stated that the Declaration does not require such insurance,
but permits it. This provision alone suggests that the
declaration contemplates that such insurance is optional. Boards
of directors of such associations typically adopt rules and
regulations not found in the declaration. There is room for much
argument as to the scope of such authority, but ultimately I think
it comes down to analysis of two things: (1) the language in the
declaration delegating discretionary authority to the Board and
(2) applicable provisions of state condominium laws.
I have no idea what the Declaration may say about Director authority (and I can't even speculate about state laws). However, I do believe that the mention of this type of insurance, with language that suggests it is optional, and nothing to suggest that the Board has authority to make it mandatory, makes it unlikely that a court would find that the Board does have such authority.
CM
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Thanks, Miriam, It has been a long time since we conversed.
The board member who raised the question was concerned about damage caused by an owner to either property of another owner or the common area. Basically, just worried about deductibles.
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Thanks, Cliff. I am coming to the conclusion that it is not a good idea, because it would protect against only two losses: the deductibles of an injured owner, including the association, or the losses of an uninsured owner. Why would we want to force someone to insure against these two risks? Doesn’t make sense to me.
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On Jul 24, 2021, at 8:33 AM, Max Lieberman <mlieb...@lslaw.com> wrote:
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On Jul 24, 2021, at 4:05 PM, Nina Whitehurst <ni...@cumberlandlegacylaw.com> wrote:
Yes that is quite true, Max, and it is what I always recommend. I thought that they were being asked to insure the building rather than their contents and for liability.
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On Jul 25, 2021, at 4:16 PM, pwalt35907 via nyclarealprop <nyclar...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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