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The Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act was created to provide a model set of laws to govern condominium, cooperative, homeowner association and planned unit development communities in the United States. Variations of the act have been adopted in Colorado, Washington (state), and some other states.
Under Davis–Stirling, a developer of a common interest development is able to create a homeowner association (HOA) to govern the development. As part of creating the HOA, the developer records a document known as the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions against the units or parcels within the HOA with the county recorder.
Passage of the Condominium Act then opened a wave of construction of condominium buildings. [40] The cooperative form can be advantageous as a building mortgage can be carried by the cooperative corporation, leaving less financing to be obtained by each co-op owner. Under condominium ownership only the separate condo owners provide financing.
Schulman stated that NAR's cooperative compensation rule was "one of the clearest cases of price-fixing and collusion" he'd ever seen. Analysis by Schulman showed that the average buyer commission rate was 3% in 95% of the Missouri home sales that were studied. [11]
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A condominium (or condo for short) is an ownership regime in which a building (or group of buildings) is divided into multiple units that are either each separately owned, or owned in common with exclusive rights of occupation by individual owners.
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A homeowner association (or homeowners' association [HOA], sometimes referred to as a property owners' association [POA], common interest development [CID], or homeowner community) is a private, legally-incorporated organization that governs a housing community, collects dues, and sets rules for its residents. [1]