You can find the answer you want in your local hall of records where the Oceanquest Condominium is located.
You can visit the local land records office (local to Oceanquest Condominium) and search in the records for the Master Deed. It will show the date it was signed.You can visit the local land records office (local to Oceanquest Condominium) and search in the records for the Master Deed. It will show the date it was signed.You can visit the local land records office (local to Oceanquest Condominium) and search in the records for the Master Deed. It will show the date it was signed.You can visit the local land records office (local to Oceanquest Condominium) and search in the records for the Master Deed. It will show the date it was signed.
No, in New York State, you cannot sell a condo unit without the condo declaration being recorded. The condo declaration is a legal document that establishes the rights and obligations of condo owners and is necessary for the sale of the unit to occur. Recording the declaration protects the rights and interests of all parties involved in the condo transaction.
Personally, I would not buy a condominium unless my review of the complete declaration was finished. Otherwise, you (and I) have zero idea about the community you're (I'm) buying into. Whether or not it can be sold may be a local legal issue. See your state condominium statute.
Your local hall of land-use records is where condominium declarations are filed and thus recorded: you can get a copy there. If you are interested in purchasing a unit in a condominium association, the real estate agent will be able to obtain a copy of the declaration, and copies of all other governing documents, from the association. You can expect to pay for all copies you request.
You may be referring to the filing number for a condominium declaration, which you can find in the local hall of records, the land-use office.
The recorded instrument that is sometimes called a Declaration of Condominium is the legal document that actually creates a condominium development under relevant state law. In Massachusetts it is called a Master Deed. A master deed submits the real property and the buildings to the statutory provisions that govern condominiums, divides a single property into individually owned units, includes restrictions and rules and regulations and provides for ownership of common areas.
Once you purchase a condominium unit, whether you are its first owner or subsequent owner, the condominium declarations will always be in force.
You typically get a Condominium Declaration from the developer or the property management company of the condominium complex. It is a legal document that outlines the rights and responsibilities of the condominium owners and the rules and regulations of the complex.
Generally, the party who recorded the lien. Specifically, California Civil Code 1367.1 (d) states that when a notice of default is filed in connection with a default in homeowners' dues in a condominium project, the association must record it or cause it to be recorded within 21 days of the payment (and provide the homeowner a copy of the recorded notice).
If you mean you want to neutralize the declaration, this may not be possible except in the case of a disaster: flood, fire, earthquake and so forth that destroys all the real estate assets and makes it uneconomical to repair them.Your governing documents may provide for a dissolution of the association, given a disaster.Otherwise, you can also read there how to modify or amend your declaration and the required number of voting percentages required in order to accomplish this change.Another PerspectiveEvery state has a condominium law. When a condominium is declared its sponsor makes it and its base tract subject to the state condominium law. The provisions for terminating a condominium are set forth in the statute and generally involve the assent by all the owners. In some cases all the units in a failed condominium are acquired by a single owner and that owner can withdraw the property from classification as a condominium. Such projects are converted into rental properties. You need to check the law in your state.
If you are developing a condominium project, you hire an association-savvy attorney who crafts the governing documents, based on state law that governs condominiums. When you purchase a condominium, by law you are entitled to copies of all your governing documents. (In Washington State, these documents are packaged in the Resale Certificate.) If you own a condominium, and your copies are lost, your association manager can provide you with copies, which you pay for. If you are interested in buying a condominium, again, you can purchase copies of the governing documents, most of which are public record.
A declaration is necessary in order to sell units in a condominium project. The declaration is a land-use document filed in the local land-use hall of records. It also represents the 'constitution' for community governance, and to modify it usually requires a majority -- sometimes an uber majority of owners' votes in favour of any amendment. A condominium association without a declaration is lawless, by definition.