Quote:
Posted By SteveM9 on 01/19/2012 7:17 PM
How would a bank or other holder of property-secured debt handle a delinquent account?
There is no law against this, its perfectly legal. The laws most people cite are laws regarding companies in the business of debt collecting. A HOA is not a debt collection company. It is an HOA. It has nothing to do with shame, money is owed, this is who owes it. Very simple.
At the town hall if you dont pay your property tax they post your name, adress, in a public area for everyone to see. If you still dont pay, they publish it in the town report. If you dont pay a bank, they file foreclosure paperwork, which is very public and searchable to anyone with an internet connection. Anyone can see this information.
Still want more examples?
Of course, it's legal to shame your delinquent/deadbeat account holder. But, it's low class, arbitrary and is more than pious in its appearance and execution. No, banks and tax collectors don't make priority of telling all the neighbors about a deadbeat account. Their public posting comes a result of a lack of communication in many cases with the account holder in question; it's an attempt to find these people officially or give them the chance, however slim, to learn of their pending foreclosure or collections matter. That's the motive in these cases.
Cut the low class, gossipy, stereotype-fulfilling behavior and focus on collecting cash in the most efficient and legally binding manner possible. Public HOA "outings" of dues payers do not carry the motive of finding the delinquent dues payer. Its motivation is humiliation
Steve, there's a big difference in those motives. Yes, I need to see more examples because your first effort is a swing and a miss.