Ananisapta
Junior Member
We live in North Carolina and bought a four-acre wooded lot in a development that has a sort of HOA. They don't strictly follow NC 47f -- for example, they have yet to publish election info from more than a month ago and their website has not had accurate info on Board members for nearly a year. They have two sets of covenants that don't agree with each other nor with 47f, nor do they strictly follow either set. The covenants require that lot owners get permission from their 'Architectural Control Committee' before cutting down any tree greater than six inches in diameter. We submitted a request for permission on the official form, on which we stated that we wished to remove six trees (out of more than a thousand in our densely overgrown woods), specifying in the limited space available, "They are ill-formed, dangerous a/o awkwardly placed." The Board Chair appointed her husband to head the ACC. He and one of the Board members came to our property and took some pictures. Forty days after our initial request, we got a curt letter from the Board Chair indicating that, based on photographic evidence, "The trees were deemed to not be in a dangerous position; they are not near a house or road. The trees are very healthy and not diseased." On these grounds, permission to cut a few of our own trees was denied.
We submitted an appeal to the Board on the grounds that removing those trees would help our property value by improving our view (as we had been professionally advised) and therefore would help property values throughout the neighborhood. We also mentioned that the Fifth Amendment protects us against encroachments on our property rights, absent due process. We interpret this to mean protocols ensuring that similarly-situated applicants would receive essentially similar treatment. We argued that nobody would be harmed by our removal of these trees, and that our property is so isolated from the rest of the community and our lot so heavily forested that, if we could make those six trees disappear overnight, literally nobody would notice their absence except us. We also submitted photographs showing that only one of the six trees is plumb, the rest being "leaners" that are inherently dangerous to anybody walking under them. The photos also show how, when leafed out, they block our "million dollar view" of the Blue Ridge. A Board meeting has been scheduled to discuss our appeal on 2/18, a month after we sent it. The total delay in approval is now nearly three months, and we fear the cost of the project will increase when the sap rises in March and tree surgeons get busy. The fellow who gave us the best price clearly wanted to complete the work before Christmas.
I'm interested in advice about the legal aspects of our case. Also, what's the worst they can do to us if we go ahead and cut those trees without their permission? Obviously, we'd rather not spend thousands on legal advice to avoid a few hundred dollars in fines. Unfortunately, the Board is composed of persons who lack sophisticated verbal understanding, and I fear the Board Chair not only despises me personally but has early onset dementia impairing her executive capacity. Any hint about how to talk to such people productively would be especially welcome!
We submitted an appeal to the Board on the grounds that removing those trees would help our property value by improving our view (as we had been professionally advised) and therefore would help property values throughout the neighborhood. We also mentioned that the Fifth Amendment protects us against encroachments on our property rights, absent due process. We interpret this to mean protocols ensuring that similarly-situated applicants would receive essentially similar treatment. We argued that nobody would be harmed by our removal of these trees, and that our property is so isolated from the rest of the community and our lot so heavily forested that, if we could make those six trees disappear overnight, literally nobody would notice their absence except us. We also submitted photographs showing that only one of the six trees is plumb, the rest being "leaners" that are inherently dangerous to anybody walking under them. The photos also show how, when leafed out, they block our "million dollar view" of the Blue Ridge. A Board meeting has been scheduled to discuss our appeal on 2/18, a month after we sent it. The total delay in approval is now nearly three months, and we fear the cost of the project will increase when the sap rises in March and tree surgeons get busy. The fellow who gave us the best price clearly wanted to complete the work before Christmas.
I'm interested in advice about the legal aspects of our case. Also, what's the worst they can do to us if we go ahead and cut those trees without their permission? Obviously, we'd rather not spend thousands on legal advice to avoid a few hundred dollars in fines. Unfortunately, the Board is composed of persons who lack sophisticated verbal understanding, and I fear the Board Chair not only despises me personally but has early onset dementia impairing her executive capacity. Any hint about how to talk to such people productively would be especially welcome!
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