Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

I had a fire in my unit caused by my brother sweating a shower pipe. the paper in the wall caught fire and there was considerable damage.

the fire was in march of 06 and the association is trying to get money from me in 2011.

i have two insurance policies, one is the general hoa policy and the other is a personal policy.

the association is saying that i owe them money because there premium was increased.

there is nothing in the cc&r that say that and i was fully insured.

what is the statute of limitations on this type of problem and can they just take my money.

andre caticchio

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Asked on 6/14/11, 12:10 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Have you been sued? I would assume not, but if you have, you need to see an attorney at once regarding preparation, service and filing of an answer or other responsive pleading.

Otherwise, your given facts show what may be the tip of an iceberg, requiring more information for a proper analysis, including whether a single incident like this could affect the HOA's insurance costs, whether it can be pinned down to this one incident, and whether you are liable for the cost increase, if any.

One possible starting point that you might try is to discuss the HOA's claim against you with the agents for the two insurers you've mentioned. Access to agents, adjusters and lawyers is one of the nice things about being insured.

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Answered on 6/14/11, 12:58 pm
Kenny Tan Law Offices of Kenny Tan

The statute of limitations that might be applicable are as follows:

1. Property damage claim - usually 3 years. They might sue under the negligence or nuisance theories for this.

2. breach of contract - in this case the cc&r is a written contract. It is 4 years from the time of your breach.

You may have a good S/L argument here. It looks like the claims are barred.

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Answered on 6/14/11, 1:42 pm

No party has a right to claim their increased insurance premiums from another party who causes them to make a claim. So unless there is something in the CC&R's that says you will be responsible, tell the HOA to pound salt.

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Answered on 6/14/11, 4:34 pm


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