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HOA Orders TARDIS Removed From In Front of Parrish Home

An anonymous reader writes A Florida couple learned that they are much bigger fans of Doctor Who than their homeowner association, after receiving a notice to remove the TARDIS from their driveway. Leann Moder and her husband David were given 15 days to get rid of the big blue box. From the article: "It was built by Moder's father as a wedding set piece, and she and her husband, David, were married in front of it. 'My husband mentioned, "Do you want to do a Doctor Who themed wedding?"' Moder said. 'That could be fun.' Since then, their TARDIS has been used at sci-fi conventions and parties, and was even the focus of a Halloween haunt the Moders set up on their driveway in October." The HOA had no comment on their stance on sonic screwdrivers, or the Eye of Harmony.

16 of 320 comments (clear)

  1. Conform or be expelled by Qzukk · · Score: 4, Funny

    The homeowners association demands that unless every single house has a TARDIS in their front yard, yours must go.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    1. Re:Conform or be expelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you don't want to conform, don't buy a home there.

      HOAs are completely up front about those things and if you don't read the bylaws before buying, you're a dumb motherfucker.

    2. Re:Conform or be expelled by Khashishi · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's all fine and good when there are infinite houses to choose from. In the real world, resources are limited, and most nice places already have overlords controlling them.

    3. Re:Conform or be expelled by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's because HOA board members' heads are smaller on the inside.

    4. Re:Conform or be expelled by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not in my case. I didn't see the bylaws of my HOA until I had been it's president for 18 months. It didn't help that it was in a messed up master-sub association hierarchy intended to leave the power in the hands of the developer, so there were multiple sets of rules flying around, only a subset of of which were passed to homeowners.

      Fortunately, that leaves the HOA relatively powerless if it comes to a lawsuit and my goal as president was to stop the crazies trying to use the HOA as a tool to crap on their neighbors and settle old differences.

      HOAs are evil, in that they are perfectly constructed to set neighbor against neighbor. We would be better off without them.
       

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    5. Re:Conform or be expelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "HOAs are completely up front about those things and if you don't read the bylaws before buying, you're a dumb motherfucker."

      Wrong. The "consent" to the "contract" is usually a legal fiction known as "constructive notice"; i.e., the H.O.A. corporation's governing documents were filed with the county, therefore the homeowner should have known about them.

      This concept was best illustrated in that scene from "The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy", when the construction foreman informs Arthur Dent that "the plans were on display".

      "But Mr. Dent, the plans have been available in the local planning office for the last nine months."

      "Oh yes, well as soon as I heard I went straight round to see them, yesterday afternoon. You hadn't exactly gone out of your way to call attention to them, had you? I mean, like actually telling anybody or anything."

      "But the plans were on display ..."

      "On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them." "That's the display department."

      "With a flashlight."

      "Ah, well the lights had probably gone."

      "So had the stairs."

      "But look, you found the notice didn't you?"

      "Yes," said Arthur, "yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard'."

      I've been trying to get documents and records -- including the governing documents, rules and regulations, etc., from my H.O.A. for several years. In response, they decided to stop accepting my H.O.A. dues payments so they could turn around and sue me for not paying them.

      See my web site, madisonhillhoa.com , for details (it hasn't been updated because I've been busy with the court case). You can also get a free copy of my book in PDF form from that site, at madisonhillhoa.com/book

    6. Re:Conform or be expelled by ArcadeMan · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's your fault for buying a house in a Zerg area.

    7. Re:Conform or be expelled by bobbied · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is not exactly true. Many HOA's "make it up as they go" and you find out later you are in violation of somebody's made up rule.

      Mine, for instance, sent me a warning letter giving me 15 days to remove an "above ground pool" from my back yard (that had been there 4 years previously) but nowhere is "above ground pool" or anything approaching that even mentioned in the deed restrictions. I know, I read though the 30 pages three times looking for it. I even called the property management company and asked them where it was and THEY couldn't find it. Turns out, it was in ANOTHER document, one that I was not aware existed and one that the HOA board had authored well after the deed restrictions where filed on my home, without my knowledge or consent.

      So, what you say is NOT always true. They often do change the rules AFTER the fact and Realtors often gloss over the HOA's authority except to tell you if there are any dues. Usually there is the "transfer paperwork" that is supposed to give you all the details, or at least warn you that there are details you should be warned about, but that is presented to the buyer at closing to sign in a 3 inch stack of paper with hundreds of "initial here" and "Sign here" stickers and who has time to actually understand all that mess? Besides, the REAL details of the HOA are in the deed restrictions and in the 5+ closings in two separate states I've attended in my lifetime I've NEVER seen them in the stack of paperwork.

      Personally, I think HOA's are an OK idea that has been made into a really bad one by the builders who use them. My primary problem with them is that they NEVER ever end. It doesn't matter what happens to my current house, in 100 years the HOA will STILL be there. Something tells me that in 100 years, circumstances are likely to change and the HOA will be a legal problem with no good solution.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    8. Re:Conform or be expelled by tlambert · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually very few areas in the US have HOAs. It's just that they are the more rich, white areas, which are more desirable. I've never lived in a place with an HOA, and only a handful of people I know live in such areas. They are often more expensive, as you are paying for the "privileged" of having someone boss you around. There must be lots of people into that. Though my current house is in an HOA area, but the HOA wasn't strong enough, so I bought the house from people who didn't sign the HOA paperwork (no idea how many owners before them didn't), so I own a non HOA house in an HOA neighborhood. Or maybe only the homes that have a plot at the local airstrip have to join the HOA.

      Inaccurate. My sister's condo in a not fantastic area of Salt Lake City, Utah, has an HOA, and typical unit price is ~$80-$100K, which will buy you ... nothing ... in most richer areas.

      Typically, an HOA is a corporation the developer creates to market and sell lots and houses in a subdivision (or units in a condo complex). After that, membership becomes part of the restrictive covenants on the deeds of the properties sold within the development boundaries, and after a certain number of units have been sold, the ownership and responsibility is passed off to the owners within the development.

      HOAs cover about 25 million houses in the U.S., and close to 60 million people, which i to say, 20% of the U.S. population.

      Last time I checked, not even 20% of the U.S. population count as "wealthy" (i.e. not having to work unless they choose to do so).

    9. Re:Conform or be expelled by schnell · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually very few areas in the US have HOAs. It's just that they are the more rich, white areas, which are more desirable.

      Not in my experience (for whatever that's worth). I was part of a HOA with the first home I ever bought, which was part of a very middle-class neighborhood of townhouses. The development was a mix of older middle class families and younger first-time home buyers or - increasingly - immigrants who were taking advantage of the mid-2000s real estate situation to buy homes. I received a number of asinine warnings from the HOA about stuff like "you need to repaint your gutters within 30 days or zOMG CONTRACTUAL HELL WILL RAIN DOWN," which was enough to make me hate HOAs forever. But the real ire of the HOA was reserved for the immigrant families.

      And, at the risk of being very politically incorrect, what the HOAs were doing there was fighting behavior that had a potential impact on property values for the whole development. Townhouses with 5-8 cars parked outside around the clock, indicating huge over-occupancy; men hanging out all over the steps and front yard all day; loud parties late into the night, etc. Why? Potential racism aside, it was because the people in the neighborhood were not so well off that a decline in property values due to their neighbors' actions wouldn't have a big impact on them. Years later, when I moved into a much nicer/richer neighborhood, there was no HOA to be found - nor would the proudly wealthy and independent residents have stood for anyone telling them what to do with their property.

      I am not condoning targeting any group for HOA persecution, and again I was very put off by my experience with a HOA. But I am saying that HOAs are not generally needed in neighborhoods that are so rich that anyone who would degrade the property value couldn't move in there anyway. HOAs will tend to be most prevalent in those areas which are "kinda white" and/or "kinda rich" where there is some worry that people who could move in there might disrupt the community or lower property values. In truly rich/white places, there is simply no need for that.

      --
      "95% of all Slashdot .sig quotes are incorrect or completely fabricated." -Benjamin Franklin
    10. Re:Conform or be expelled by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No matter where you go though there will be petty politics when you arrive. If you ever find a group of like minded and enlightened indivuduals maybe things will work out briefly until someone cranky moves in and disagrees with everyone else. Soon you get a big collection of nutty guys in the neighborhood and they start getting elected to the HOA board, which is actually pretty common because the sane people want nothing to do with being on the board.

      Then it turns out that to "take your business elsewhere" is an extremely onerous task - uproot yourself and the family, sell the house at a loss, move to another neighborhood, and take your chances all over again.

  2. Remove the goddamn box by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Leaving a TV prop replica sitting in your driveway is douchey. Store it in the garage, or your storage shed, or the back yard, or a storage facility. Nobody in your neighborhood likes Doctor Who so much that they want to come home to your driveway TARDIS every day. Stop being a douche.

    1. Re:Remove the goddamn box by brantondaveperson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No. No it isn't. It's fine. You Americans love your freedom of speech, but when it comes to living next door to a slightly more interesting house than the usual cookie-cutter bland beige boxes you get all hot under the collar and start using words like "douchey".

      Which, of course, isn't a word.

      Just get over it. HOAs *should* be illegal, and I wonder how far they'd get if tested in a court of actual law.

  3. House needs a few statues now . . . by cashman73 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Of course, a true Whovian will install some nice statues of weeping angels in the front yard!

    1. Re:House needs a few statues now . . . by mrbester · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's not a threat, even if it is believed that they are ruthless killer aliens as the constant net curtain twitching that happens by the local busybodies will ensure the angels remain phase locked and can't hurt anybody...

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
  4. Re:live by the sword by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Don't buy a new home then. Resale homes are an excellent buy and often are in better shape than brand new homes which haven't had the proverbial bugs worked out yet.

    Oh, he can buy a new home, he just shouldn't buy one from a Developer who is building in that fashion. Honestly, if you really must have a new home, it's usually better to take the time to actually have one built for you.

    I've heard some people try to claim that HOA regulations are no different than zoning codes in a City. That's simply not true- there are far more legal protections for property owners under zoning ordinances than for "members" of a HOA. And a dirty little secret is a HOA is actually a type of Corporation, which can be sued, go bankrupt, and have other bad things happen... and when they do? Guess what, "your" property is part of the Assets and YOU are partially responsible as a 'member'.

    Don't fall for the HOA bullshit. Many people get sucked in because the prices seem better (they're not, dues always go up and never go away). Some like it because it promises a legal method to a segregated community, as long as the other bigots are on board with you and don't put it in writing. Many just like the idea of being able to get a position of power and become a Mini-Dictator over the neighborhood. For most sane people, HOA's are something to be avoided at all costs.