Depending on the location of the condominium, state law, county law or city law may require minimum handicapped parking stalls and other amenities specifically to accommodate disabled persons.
Review Texas law about handicapped access to condominiums. Your association may be obligated to provide handicap access, but it may not be required to make the parking spaces available at exactly the place you want them. It's a good idea for you -- assuming that you are a handicapped owner -- to work this out with your board of directors.
If the parking lot is on city property (not owned by the landlord), city rules will dictate who can park there and when. However, if the parking lot resides entirely on private property, and assuming that proper signage is in place, then YES the landlord can restrict the parking spaces to residents only. Most apartment/condo parking lots at the very least offer someparking spaces for visitors.
According to the New York Appellate Division of State Supreme Court decided the co-op and condo law that courts will not get involved in decisions unless there is bad faith, fraud or breach of duty. New York Times article "Courts Upholds Condo's Motorcycle Ban". This case set a precedent as the American Motorcycle Association vs. Condo Association.
It's possible that the condominium association carries liability insurance. You can make your claim with the board of directors of the association, who will take it up with their insurance carrier.
A performance bond protects the association: an association would not be protecting the best interests of its investors if it hired a vendor with no performance bond.
having problem with condo managment, parking commercial truck in guest parking.
You can find the guidelines for parking in your governing documents, in the section that covers parking.If your condominium association requires that residents' cars be labeled with a resident sticker and your car displayed no resident sticker, there was no way to know that your car belonged to a resident.
is the walkway on the roof (which the 4th floor residedence use to reach ther condo) common are to all residents
No. If it is owned by the condominium it is private property. Access to it, and its usage can be controlled by the condo association. There is a lot misunderstanding in most people's minds, and a great deal of legal difference in terminology such as; 'public property,' 'public space,' 'open space,' 'space "to which the public is invited,"' etc., etc.. All have different interpretations and meanings under the law.
Parking in a condominium community is defined in the governing documents. There is no standard.
Yes.You can request the status of the association from the Secretary of State where the association is located.
Absolutely, yes. The association may be incorporated as a profit, not for profit, or an unincorporated association.