As
the 2015 Colorado legislative session gets underway, the media attention and
discussion regarding the lack of attainable housing, skyrocketing rental rates,
and the ongoing state and local efforts to reverse these trends have risen to a
dull roar. The hyperbole and rhetoric from those who would oppose any reforms
has risen to cacophonous levels.
Among
the most often quoted talking points from the opposition are that any changes
to Colorado’s existing laws would strip homeowners of their right to seek
redress for construction defects and that they would virtually insulate
construction professionals from such claims.
The long and the short of it is that if this year’s legislation looks
anything like SB 220 from last year, nothing could be further from the truth.
The two main provisions from SB 220 were: 1) protection of a construction
professional’s ability to resolve construction defect claims through
arbitration; and 2) requirement of informed consent of more than 50% of the
owners within a common interest community before a construction defect action
could begin. Neither of these changes would strip homeowners of any rights and
they certainly would not insulate construction professionals from construction
defect actions.
There
is No Right to a Jury Trial in Civil Actions
One
of the opposition’s favorite arguments is that requiring arbitration of
construction defect claims unfairly infringes upon homeowners’ “rights” to have
their cases tried to a jury of their peers. The problem with this argument is
that it is simply not true. There is no constitutional right in Colorado to
have your civil action tried to a jury. See
Colorado Constitution, Article II, § 23 (“The right of trial by jury shall
remain inviolate in criminal cases…”); see
also Garhart ex rel. Tinsman
v. Columbia/Healthone, LLC, 95 P.3d 571, 580 (Colo. 2010) (“[T]he Colorado
constitutional right to a jury applies to criminal cases, not civil cases…”).
Despite
the opposition’s view of arbitration, the simple fact is that in Colorado,
arbitration is a favored method of dispute resolution. Peterman
v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 961 P.2d 487, 493 (Colo. 1998). The Colorado Constitution, statutes, and case law all support
agreements to arbitrate disputes. See Lane v. Urgitus, 145 P.3d 672
(Colo. 2006). Colorado public policy
strongly favors the resolution of disputes through arbitration. See Huizar v. Allstate Ins. Co., 952 P.2d 342 (Colo. 1998); Byerly v. Kirkpatrick Pettis Smith Polian, Inc., 996 P.2d 771 (Colo. App. 2000).
In
fact, the Colorado Common Interest Act, the law giving rise to common interest
communities and empowering the very homeowners associations which bring
construction defect actions, states:
The General
Assembly hereby specifically endorses and encourages associations, unit owners,
managers, declarants, and all other parties to disputes arising under this
article to agree to make use of all available public or private resources for
alternative dispute resolution, including, without limitation, the resources
offered by the office of dispute resolution within the Colorado judicial branch
through its website.
C.R.S.
§ 38-33.3-124(1)(a)(II).
This
same section concludes with the following subsection:
The declaration,
bylaws, or rules of the association may specify situations in which disputes
shall be resolved by binding arbitration under the uniform arbitration act,
part 2 of article 22 of title 13, C.R.S., or by other means of alternative
dispute resolution under the “Dispute Resolution Act,” part 3 of article 22 of
title 13, C.R.S.
The
most hypocritical part of this argument, from the opposition’s perspective, is
that some of the very plaintiffs’ attorneys now championing the “right” to jury
trials have arbitration clauses in their own engagement letters, signed by
homeowners associations when the associations hire the attorneys to represent
them in construction defect actions. Perhaps the “right” to a jury trial only
applies when the associations sue construction professionals for construction
defects, not when they sue plaintiffs’ attorneys for malpractice.
Requiring
Informed Consent Does Not Insulate Construction Professionals From Construction
Defect Claims
One
of the most often repeated arguments against requiring informed consent from a
majority of owners in a development before a construction defect action can be
initiated is that developers/declarants typically own a number of homes within
a community while they remain unsold and that the declarant could frustrate the
consent requirement by voting against the construction defect action. To the extent that the legislature views this
to be a legitimate concern, one way to deal with it would be to make clear that
a declarant cannot vote in the election regarding whether to proceed with a
construction defect action. I have seen this written into several declarations
for homeowners associations, and it would seem to eliminate the problem
highlighted by the opposition. Once that concern is ameliorated, would the
opposition continue to argue against a homeowner’s right to have a say as to
whether his or her community should engage in a construction defect action?

No comments:
Post a Comment