There is a conflict it seems
The HOA claim always falls second to any outstanding mortgage. So if the HOA forecloses on a unit that has a mortgage they get nothing (no right to resell) until that mortgage is satisfied. Thus there is no value, only more cost, to an Association foreclosure in that situation.
If Starwood or a subsidiary holds the mortgage then there is indeed a big appearance of conflict of interest as the management side should be pushing for foreclosure thus pushing responsibility for the annual fees over to Starwood as the owner after foreclosure. But the mortgage holder may not want that cost so they don't take action leaving the other owners to cover the fees uncollected.
Not a good situation and one far too many developer managed resorts find themselves in. Add in an automatic and guaranteed percentage for the management on every dollar collected, rather than a fixed management fee, and the possibility for abuse is obvious. The rapidly rising fees seem to be proof that the system works for the developer but not the individual owners. It is not a pretty picture and unlikely to change given the horrible thresholds for management change that have been written into the documents. Those might not hold up in a legal challenge (in fact they most likely wouldn't) BUT the cost to make that challenge would be prohibitive and tough for the owners to come up with. I wouldn't want to be an owner caught in this costly mess.
I expect that the Starwood loan would be a first mortgage and I don't know where the MF lien would fall, either before the first mortgage, or subordinate to the first mortgage.
If Starwood were to foreclose on a purchase loan, then Starwood would become the owner of record, and responsible for any past due MFs, if any. If the HOA does the foreclosure, then we all become owners of the unit, and we all responsible for the MFs.
So there is a big difference between who starts a foreclosure on a unit, the HOA or Starwood.
Greg
The HOA claim always falls second to any outstanding mortgage. So if the HOA forecloses on a unit that has a mortgage they get nothing (no right to resell) until that mortgage is satisfied. Thus there is no value, only more cost, to an Association foreclosure in that situation.
If Starwood or a subsidiary holds the mortgage then there is indeed a big appearance of conflict of interest as the management side should be pushing for foreclosure thus pushing responsibility for the annual fees over to Starwood as the owner after foreclosure. But the mortgage holder may not want that cost so they don't take action leaving the other owners to cover the fees uncollected.
Not a good situation and one far too many developer managed resorts find themselves in. Add in an automatic and guaranteed percentage for the management on every dollar collected, rather than a fixed management fee, and the possibility for abuse is obvious. The rapidly rising fees seem to be proof that the system works for the developer but not the individual owners. It is not a pretty picture and unlikely to change given the horrible thresholds for management change that have been written into the documents. Those might not hold up in a legal challenge (in fact they most likely wouldn't) BUT the cost to make that challenge would be prohibitive and tough for the owners to come up with. I wouldn't want to be an owner caught in this costly mess.