Prepared by Vince Caruso, Strategic Consultant
Powered by Genesis Strategic Advisory | Day 7 PBC
The Situation
Jose Segura owns Unit 208 in a 29-unit condominium. The HOA refuses to fix a leaking roof that is destroying his property and endangering his health.
Unit 208, 15516 Nordhoff St, North Hills, CA 91364
HOA: Uniappartment Homeowners Association (29 units)
Manager: California HOA Solutions LLC (BBB Rating: F)
Built: 1980 (HVAC insulation = presumed asbestos)
Roof leaks every rain → water intrusion → mold growth
Lab confirmed: Aspergillus/Penicillium at 790/m³ (82.3% of spores)
Outdoor baseline: 260/m³ — 3x elevated indoors
Remediation blocked: Roof must be fixed first
CC&Rs Article III §6(A): Association “SHALL maintain Common Areas including exterior”
Vote: 20-9 AGAINST special assessment to fix roof
20 unaffected units voted against repairs for 9 affected units
Board has done nothing despite formal maintenance requests
Tenant vacated — unit uninhabitable
Mortgage payments with zero rental income
Mold remediation estimated at $1,862+ (will increase)
Health exposure to toxic mold species
Property value diminished by mold disclosure requirement
Legal Foundation
California law is unambiguous: the HOA has a mandatory, non-discretionary duty to maintain the roof. The membership vote does not change this.
The 20-9 vote blocked a special assessment, but it cannot override the HOA’s statutory and contractual maintenance duty. The Board has multiple tools to fund repairs without a vote — including SB 900 emergency assessments specifically designed for health hazards like mold.
HOA “is responsible for repairing, replacing, and maintaining the common area.” The roof is common area. This duty is mandatory.
Effective Jan 1, 2025: Board can levy emergency assessments for “health or safety or another hazardous condition” — explicitly includes mold and asbestos. No vote required. No dollar cap.
Association “SHALL operate and maintain Common Areas including exterior painting, maintenance, repair.” “SHALL” = mandatory, not discretionary.
Visible mold = substandard building condition. Board members face misdemeanor criminal liability — up to 1 year jail, $1,000 fines.
Directors owe duties of care and loyalty to ALL owners — not just the majority. Letting 20 unaffected units sacrifice 9 affected units = breach of fiduciary duty.
Prevailing party gets mandatory attorney fees. This makes the case economically viable — attorneys will take it on contingency. The HOA pays Jose’s legal bills if he wins.
Case Law
In 2025, a California court affirmed a massive judgment against an HOA on nearly identical facts.
Water intrusion from common area. HOA delayed repairs 19+ months despite expert warnings. Mold grew. Unit became uninhabitable. Board president made false statements denying mold. Court affirmed $1.8 million judgment including:
Against the HOA entity for gross negligence
Against the board president personally
Compensatory + punitive + injunction to repair
| Case | Year | Holding |
|---|---|---|
| Frances T. v. Village Green | 1986 | CA Supreme Court: HOA has landlord-like duty. Board members personally liable. |
| Sands v. Walnut Gardens | 2019 | HOA liable for failing to maintain roof and pipes per CC&Rs. |
| Affan v. Portofino Cove | 2010 | Business judgment rule doesn’t protect inaction without investigation. |
| Posey v. Leavitt | 1991 | Individual owner can sue to compel HOA to enforce CC&Rs. |
| Hohne Family (LA) | 2025 | $10.1M verdict for family exposed to mold/lead/mycotoxins. |
Legal Arsenal
Each cause of action attacks the HOA’s failure from a different legal angle, creating an overwhelming multi-front assault.
HOA contractually obligated to maintain exterior. Refused. Strongest claim.
Board owes duty to ALL owners. Sacrificing 9 for 20 = breach.
Knew about hazard, failed to act. Tightest deadline — act now.
Conscious disregard of health/safety. Opens door to punitive damages.
Each rain = new tort. Statute resets. Essentially no time bar.
Civil Code §4775 mandatory maintenance duty violated.
Mold = substandard building. Board faces misdemeanor charges.
Court declares HOA must fix roof regardless of vote.
Court ORDERS HOA to repair roof and remediate mold.
Financial Recovery
Jose’s individual recovery potential ranges from $85,000 to $600,000+. Combined 9-owner action: up to $4.7 million.
| Category | Conservative | Aggressive |
|---|---|---|
| Mold Remediation + Reconstruction | $10,462 | $34,494 |
| Lost Rental Income | $12,000 | $24,000 |
| Mortgage Payments (no offset) | $12,000 | $24,000 |
| Diminished Property Value | $10,000 | $40,000 |
| Medical / Health Expenses | $500 | $5,000 |
| Emotional Distress | $25,000 | $150,000 |
| Punitive Damages | — | $250,000 |
| Attorney Fees (§5975 mandatory) | $50,000 | $200,000 |
| TOTAL | $135,000+ | $790,000+ |
Critical Deadlines
No claims are currently time-barred as of March 22, 2026. The personal injury SOL is the tightest at approximately April 27, 2027.
| Claim | SOL | Earliest Accrual | Expiration | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breach of CC&Rs (restriction) | 5 years | April 27, 2025 | April 27, 2030 | SAFE |
| Breach of CC&Rs (contract) | 4 years | April 27, 2025 | April 27, 2029 | SAFE |
| Breach of Fiduciary Duty | 4 years | April 27, 2025 | April 27, 2029 | SAFE |
| Negligence / Personal Injury | 2 years | April 27, 2025 | April 27, 2027 | 13 MONTHS |
| Property Damage | 3 years | April 27, 2025 | April 27, 2028 | SAFE |
| Continuing Nuisance | None | Ongoing | N/A | SAFE |
| Declaratory / Injunctive | None | N/A | N/A | SAFE |
Full Package
Every document in this legal package — research, filings, strategy, and evidence tools. Click to view.
Comprehensive demand citing §4775, SB 900, Ridley, Frances T. 30-day deadline. Ready to customize and send via certified mail.
View Document →9 causes of action. Multi-plaintiff template for all 9 affected owners. Punitive damages. Injunctive relief. Jury demand.
View Document →30-day battle plan. 5 pillars of the case. Entity investigation. Settlement targets. What to tell Jose. Complete playbook.
View Document →$85K–$600K individual estimate. $800K–$4.7M combined. Comparable verdicts: $1.8M, $2M, $3.2M, $10.1M, $48M.
View Document →Step-by-step for Jose THIS WEEK. Photos, medical, asbestos testing, HOA records request, financial tracking, insurance claims.
View Document →Comprehensive dossier: Davis-Stirling, SB 900, fiduciary duty, mold case law, SOL analysis, insurance, regulatory leverage.
View Document →The January 2025 law that changed everything. Emergency assessment authority now explicitly covers mold and asbestos.
View Document →Full OCR extraction of Uniappartment HOA CC&Rs. Key provisions highlighted: Art. III §6(A), Art. V §2, Section 15.
View Document →Complete case overview: parties, timeline, contacts, key dates, legal theories, and the path to resolution.
View Document →Next Steps
Immediate, decisive steps to build the strongest possible position.
100+ photos, video walkthrough, medical evaluation, asbestos testing, HOA records request, contact other 8 affected owners, financial loss spreadsheet.
Comprehensive demand letter via certified mail citing §4775, SB 900, Frances T., Sands, Ridley. 30-day deadline. CC to HOA insurance carrier, management company, and Joshua Ochoa personally.
File complaints with LA County Dept of Public Health, LADBS code enforcement, City of LA Housing Dept. Government inspections create official violation records.
Consult HOA litigation attorney (contingency fee). Organize all 9 affected owners as co-plaintiffs. Prepare for filing if HOA doesn’t respond.
File in LA County Superior Court. 9 causes of action. Simultaneously file for TRO/preliminary injunction compelling emergency roof repair. Settlement most likely at months 6-9.
Individual (Jose): $35,000 – $75,000 + roof repair + mold remediation at HOA’s expense
Combined (9 owners): $200,000 – $500,000 + full roof replacement + remediation of all units
Most likely resolution: Settlement at months 6-9 once HOA’s insurance carrier assesses exposure.