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LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
good afternoon.

for background.. please see https://www.hoatalk.com/Forum/tabid/55/forumid/1/postid/383603/view/topic/Default.aspx

here is where we stand

Case Update – Disputed Board Resignation and Unauthorized Meeting

Quick update on my ongoing case involving my position as a director on a condominium association board.

The judge has narrowed the dispute to three issues:

What are the legal requirements for a board member to resign from a Texas nonprofit condominium association.

Did I actually resign.

Whether a meeting was required for a resignation to occur and whether the meeting itself was valid.

The defense claims that I verbally resigned at a special meeting of owners, that the resignation was effective immediately, and that it was irrevocable. Their evidence primarily consists of testimony from several board members who say they heard me say the words “I resign.” The board later produced minutes stating that I resigned and that the board accepted the resignation.

My account of what happened is different.

The special meeting itself was highly disputed. I believed the board had called the meeting without proper authority under the governing documents, and that the property manager had collected blank proxies from owners ahead of the meeting. From my perspective, the meeting was being used as a procedural mechanism to remove me from the board.

During the meeting JD (who was administering sign-ins and proxies but is not a director or officer of the association) asked to speak with me outside the meeting room. In that conversation he suggested that I should consider resigning rather than going through the process of a removal vote where the board already had the proxies.

I told him I was not going to resign. I explained that the board did not have the authority to call a meeting of owners to remove a director without an owner-initiated petition signed by 51% of the ownership, as required by the governing documents. I also explained the employee office manager had gone door to door collecting general proxies(no mention of removal vote) — was wrong. I was not going to resign and be forced out by what I believed was a rogue board acting outside its authority.

When we returned upstairs, people were standing around waiting for the meeting to begin. During that time I believed the my removal by a vote was imminent. I asked jd a question: if I were ever to consider resigning, I would require certain conditions and assurances from the board. JD and I discussed those conditions. He then left to speak with the board.

About five minutes later the meeting began to disperse. I did not hear or see what occurred with the board during that time. JD came back and told me that the board had agreed to my conditions and that I should gather my receipts and present them. He said he would make sure the board did not drag their feet.

At that point I simply shrugged my shoulders, and another attendee and I left the meeting.

The central dispute before the court now is whether this sequence of events constitutes a clear and unequivocal resignation under Texas nonprofit law, or whether it was simply a conditional discussion that never resulted in an actual resignation being communicated to the board.

That is where the case currently stands.

clarifications , even though tx boc states that a director can resign at any time by submitting their resignation in writing... this is not exclusive. The judge has already stated this.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 11:45 AM
[snippage]About five minutes later the meeting began to disperse. I did not hear or see what occurred with the board during that time. JD came back and told me that the board had agreed to my conditions and that I should gather my receipts and present them. He said he would make sure the board did not drag their feet.

At that point I simply shrugged my shoulders, and another attendee and I left the meeting.

The central dispute before the court now is whether this sequence of events constitutes a clear and unequivocal resignation under Texas nonprofit law, or whether it was simply a conditional discussion that never resulted in an actual resignation being communicated to the board.

That is where the case currently stands.

clarifications , even though tx boc states that a director can resign at any time by submitting their resignation in writing... this is not exclusive. The judge has already stated this.
Thank you for the update.

Did the HOA attorney present something that convinced the judge that BO 22.2111's requirement for "written notice" does not apply?

BillD16 (Texas)
Posts: 941
Posted:
Thanks for the update!

> clarifications , even though tx boc states that a director can resign at any time by submitting their resignation in writing...
> this is not exclusive. The judge has already stated this.

So if I understand this: a director *can* resign by submitting a resignation in writing. But that's not the only way they can resign? Ie, a director can resign via a music video? Or in ASL? Or (in very unfortunate circumstances) via a seance? Or if the director is narcoleptic and falls asleep during a Board meeting and has a bad dream where they realize they are naked and so in their embarrassment they mumble "I resign" in their sleep? In my uneducated opinion, this seems *extremely* nit-picky on the part of the court. I don't know the principles that judges are supposed to operate by in deciding this stuff, but I don't see how justice is served without a tangible affirmation of the intent to resign (ie, via a letter, email, or even a music video). If nothing else, what's to keep one or more Board members from simply lying and saying "I heard them say 'I resign'". (Of course, they could simply forge a resignation letter, but I suspect that most Board members lack the cahones to commit out and out fraud like that).

Cynic that I am, I can't help but wonder if the judge is looking to drag this out so that all parties feel that they've had their viewpoint properly considered.

Best regards,

Bill

HOA Board ex-President
Austin, Texas USA

“You can’t put too much water in a nuclear reactor”
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
From Texas's BO 22:
Sec. 22.2111. RESIGNATION OF DIRECTOR. Except as provided by the certificate of formation or bylaws, a director of a corporation may resign at any time by providing written notice to the corporation.

Oh no. The defendants here (the HOA and/or its directors) are saying that this is not the only way to resign.

The statute section does not have a "shall" in it.

This undoes my argument that the notice has to be in writing or else the notice does not count.

LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
Bill you are correct.. written resignation is MAY be used. But that doesn't exclude other methods of resignation.

SO in answer to Ellen's question, TBOC is permissive not excusive. The case referred to which stipulates that "may" in the statute indicates that writing is one possible metho of resignation, not that it is the sole method permitted by law. (see Inwood n homeowners association v. Meier)

The judge and defense attorney and myself have all agreed that a verbal resignation could be valid. the question in front of the judge is, Did the sequence of events on Nov 19 meet the legal requirement of a valid resignation.

clear, unequivocal, and given voluntarily and unconditional.

The defense will say that the board heard me say I resign across the room.

I Will show that any snippets or portions of a conversation they hear do not constitute clear and unequivocal delivery of resignation.
NameW1 (Texas)
Posts: 32
Posted:
lesson learned: always record board interactions.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
YES!!!!!! This is so important. ...

For the past five months, the board meeting minutes have been misused. Minutes are supposed to accurately record the actions taken by the board. Instead, the minutes have included accusations that were unfounded and never investigated, while omitting serious concerns raised about the performance of the property manager. When these issues are brought forward, they are sometimes left out of the record because the person preparing the minutes does not agree that there is a problem.

To preserve an accurate record of what actually occurs, we have audio recordings of each meeting that provide a complete, word-for-word account. However, when I or another board member objects to inaccuracies or omissions in the minutes, we are told that it does not matter because the majority has approved the minutes as written.
The minutes from sep 2025 and october 2025 have been submitted as evidence. Even though they don't match the recordings. Myself and another board member vehemently objected to the minutes at the time.

The truth is, a rogue board can manipulate the written record of the association and create a false narrative at any time they want to.

.Regarding the “meeting” that the board is claiming I resigned,, it is important to clarify that the gathering in question was never called to order and was not a board meeting. Despite this, the board later created minutes stating that I resigned effective immediately and that the resignation was irrevocable. This statement is completely inaccurate. I never made such a statement, nor did I communicate any resignation to the board. In fact, I did not speak with any member of the board that evening.

By creating minutes that claim an immediate and irrevocable resignation occurred at a gathering that was never formally convened, the board is mischaracterizing what took place. The minutes appear to document events in a way that supports a predetermined agenda rather than accurately reflecting what actually happened.

ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 7:31 PM

The minutes from sep 2025 and october 2025 have been submitted as evidence. Even though they don't match the recordings. Myself and another board member vehemently objected to the minutes at the time.
Did you save a copy of the recordings and ask to submit the recordings as evidence?
BillD16 (Texas)
Posts: 941
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By ElleN on 03/07/2026 8:11 AM
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 7:31 PM

The minutes from sep 2025 and october 2025 have been submitted as evidence. Even though they don't match the recordings. Myself and another board member vehemently objected to the minutes at the time.
Did you save a copy of the recordings and ask to submit the recordings as evidence?

This. I'd look at generating a text transcript from the video.

Bill

HOA Board ex-President
Austin, Texas USA

“You can’t put too much water in a nuclear reactor”
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
i do have the audio from the meetings. but ,, there was no audio at the "special meeting of owners" on nov 19.
DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Seems to be this is going to be your testimony against the remainder of the board. If they all testify you verbally resigned in the presence of 2 or more board members, meeting or no meeting, the court may find you resigned.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 7:31 PM

.Regarding the “meeting” that the board is claiming I resigned,, it is important to clarify that the gathering in question was never called to order and was not a board meeting. Despite this, the board later created minutes stating that I resigned effective immediately and that the resignation was irrevocable. This statement is completely inaccurate. I never made such a statement, nor did I communicate any resignation to the board. In fact, I did not speak with any member of the board that evening.

By creating minutes that claim an immediate and irrevocable resignation occurred at a gathering that was never formally convened, the board is mischaracterizing what took place. The minutes appear to document events in a way that supports a predetermined agenda rather than accurately reflecting what actually happened.

I am now pessimistic for your chances. Why?

First, a resignation does not have to be submitted directly to the board. I am not sure the board meeting minutes matter.

Second, the following exchange seems to be a huge problem for your claim:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 11:45 AM

When we returned upstairs, people were standing around waiting for the [owners'] meeting to begin. During that time I believed the my removal by a vote was imminent. I asked jd a question: if I were ever to consider resigning, I would require certain conditions and assurances from the board. JD and I discussed those conditions. He then left to speak with the board.

About five minutes later the meeting began to disperse. I did not hear or see what occurred with the board during that time. JD came back and told me that the board had agreed to my conditions and that I should gather my receipts and present them. He said he would make sure the board did not drag their feet.

At that point I simply shrugged my shoulders, and another attendee and I left the meeting.
You initiated a discussion of your resigning. You said you would need certain conditions to be met. The communications are foggy and yet not that foggy. You and JD discussed the conditions, as if you were "bargaining." That suggests you were ready to make a deal and submit an "offer." JD took what may or may not have been an offer to the Board. The Board accepted the conditions. In other words, arguably: An offer took place, the offer was "bargained over," the other party (the board) accepted your offer. By all appearances a deal was struck. In response to this claim by JD (that a deal was struck), you did not object.

You were under attack and under pressure. I think you made mistakes. Granted those mistakes were understandable.

I can see a judge with a very full docket easily ruling against you. All here at HOAtalk seem to agree that a written notice is not required. After the exchanges with JD described above, I think it is not fair to a corporate board to have to interpret your shrug and departure as a "No, I am not resigning."
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By ElleN on 03/08/2026 11:10 AM
All here at HOAtalk seem to agree that a written notice is not required.
That is, all here now seem to agree on this point.
BillD16 (Texas)
Posts: 941
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By ElleN on 03/08/2026 11:10 AM
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 7:31 PM

I am now pessimistic for your chances. Why?

First, a resignation does not have to be submitted directly to the board. I am not sure the board meeting minutes matter.

Second, the following exchange seems to be a huge problem for your claim:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 11:45 AM

When we returned upstairs, people were standing around waiting for the [owners'] meeting to begin. During that time I believed the my removal by a vote was imminent. I asked jd a question: if I were ever to consider resigning, I would require certain conditions and assurances from the board. JD and I discussed those conditions. He then left to speak with the board.

About five minutes later the meeting began to disperse. I did not hear or see what occurred with the board during that time. JD came back and told me that the board had agreed to my conditions and that I should gather my receipts and present them. He said he would make sure the board did not drag their feet.

At that point I simply shrugged my shoulders, and another attendee and I left the meeting.
You initiated a discussion of your resigning. You said you would need certain conditions to be met. The communications are foggy and yet not that foggy. You and JD discussed the conditions, as if you were "bargaining." That suggests you were ready to make a deal and submit an "offer." JD took what may or may not have been an offer to the Board. The Board accepted the conditions. In other words, arguably: An offer took place, the offer was "bargained over," the other party (the board) accepted your offer. By all appearances a deal was struck. In response to this claim by JD (that a deal was struck), you did not object.

You were under attack and under pressure. I think you made mistakes. Granted those mistakes were understandable.

I can see a judge with a very full docket easily ruling against you. All here at HOAtalk seem to agree that a written notice is not required. After the exchanges with JD described above, I think it is not fair to a corporate board to have to interpret your shrug and departure as a "No, I am not resigning."

I agree that it seems unfair that the Board should have interpreted "shrug and leave" as "no". On the other hand, it seems wrong and even a bit irresponsible for the Board member to not "close the deal" and get a solid, non-vague "yes" or "no" from Laska.

Do you remember the movie Caddyshack? There are a couple of important dialog exchanges that touch on this:

[Judge Smails is preparing to hit the ball on the first tee while Al Czervick watches]
Al Czervik: Hey 'Whitey,' where's your hat?
[Smails looks over at Czervick, who is watching anxiously]
Al Czervik: ...let's go while we're young!
Judge Smails: Mind Sir? Trying to tee off.
Al Czervik: ...I bet ya slice into the woods! A hundred bucks!
Judge Smails: Gambling is illegal at Bushwood sir, and I never slice.
[the judge hits the ball, and it goes flying into some trees, in response, he shouts in frustration]
Al Czervik: Okay, you can owe me!
Judge Smails: [mad] I owe you nothing!

and "The Final Putt":

Al Czervik: Hey Smails! Double or nothing says the kid makes it! $80,000!
Judge Smails: *mutters something*
Ty Webb: What's that, Judge?
Judge Smails: You're on!

Both of these scenes speak to the validity (or not) of an imprecise response. The "Final Putt", in particular. JD (or someone) should have played the role of Ty Webb and pushed to get an explicit "yes" or "no". I know without a doubt that I would have pressed for an explicit answer{1}. To be honest, I think JD bungled it. Personally, I consider the exchange to be more like: JD says "conditions accepted, please sign here" and hands Laska a document, and Laska takes the document, shrugs, and leaves with the unsigned document.

Or: JD says "conditions accepted" and extends their hand for a handshake, and Laska shrugs and leaves without the handshake.

I'm not sure it would have been wise for Laska to agree to a purely verbal acceptance of the conditions.

(To the credit of both parties: it'd be so easy to lie. But it does not appear that anyone is doing so. Which (to me) indicates that it's misunderstanding and not treachery. I don't know if that matters).

I'm not pessimistic - just clueless about the principles that a judge would use to make a decision here.

I'm not sure it would be wise to cite Caddyshack in court, as Judge Smails is a highly unsympathetic character.

{1} Not rocket science. Just: I've raised two kids.

Bill

HOA Board ex-President
Austin, Texas USA

“You can’t put too much water in a nuclear reactor”
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
I have a board member that has already testified that i was never in the same room as the rest of the board, I never talked to the rest of the board. ..

LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
I want to clarify some facts regarding the claim that I resigned from the board.

First, the Association’s own attorney initially provided an opinion regarding the resignation issue. However, after he began receiving multiple conflicting accounts of what actually happened that evening, he withdrew that opinion because the facts being reported to him were inconsistent. He clearly stated in that opinion, that the board should not rely on his initial draft. He stated that without a set of undisputed facts, it was impossible to give a legal opinion.

As soon as I learned that a majority of the board was attempting to create meeting minutes stating that I had offered my resignation to the board and that it had been accepted, I immediately sent an email to the board clarifying my position. In that email, I stated that I was withdrawing any intent to resign and that I would continue serving my elected term.

I also attached a prior legal opinion from a former association attorney that is part of the association’s official records. That opinion stated that a resignation is a voluntary unilateral act and that, unless a resignation specifies a future effective date, a board member may withdraw their intent to resign up until the board accepts the resignation at a duly called meeting.

It should be noted that the language in that prior attorney opinion may not perfectly reflect what the law ultimately requires. However, that opinion exists in the association’s records and was relied upon as guidance at the time.

My position has consistently been that I never announced a resignation to the board. The only conversation that occurred was a discussion with the JD about what terms might be required if I were to consider resigning. That type of discussion about possible conditions is not the same as a clear and unequivocal resignation.

Importantly, the JD will testify that I never spoke directly to the board and was never in the same room with them that evening. A board member has already testified to the same fact.

When a resignation is not submitted in writing, courts generally look at the facts and circumstances surrounding the alleged resignation to determine whether one actually occurred.

My position is that even if the discussion with the JD were interpreted as a resignation (which I dispute), I promptly clarified and withdrew any intent to resign as soon as I learned that the events were being mischaracterized.

At that time, the board had not taken any formal action to recognize or accept a resignation. Typically, formal action would involve steps such as:
calling a duly noticed board meeting to address the resignation,
voting to accept the resignation and recording it in the minutes,
announcing a vacancy to the owners, or
sending written confirmation of the resignation.

None of those actions had occurred at the time I clarified my position.

Ultimately, the court will evaluate the facts and determine what actually happened.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
I want to clarify some facts regarding the claim that I resigned from the board.

First, the Association’s own attorney initially provided an opinion regarding the resignation issue. However, after he began receiving multiple conflicting accounts of what actually happened that evening, he withdrew that opinion because the facts being reported to him were inconsistent. He clearly stated in that opinion, that the board should not rely on his initial draft. He stated that without a set of undisputed facts, it was impossible to give a legal opinion.

As soon as I learned that a majority of the board was attempting to create meeting minutes stating that I had offered my resignation to the board and that it had been accepted, I immediately sent an email to the board clarifying my position. In that email, I stated that I was withdrawing any intent to resign and that I would continue serving my elected term.

I also attached a prior legal opinion from a former association attorney that is part of the association’s official records. That opinion stated that a resignation is a voluntary unilateral act and that, unless a resignation specifies a future effective date, a board member may withdraw their intent to resign up until the board accepts the resignation at a duly called meeting.

It should be noted that the language in that prior attorney opinion may not perfectly reflect what the law ultimately requires. However, that opinion exists in the association’s records and was relied upon as guidance at the time.

My position has consistently been that I never announced a resignation to the board. The only conversation that occurred was a discussion with the JD about what terms might be required if I were to consider resigning. That type of discussion about possible conditions is not the same as a clear and unequivocal resignation.

Importantly, the JD will testify that I never spoke directly to the board and was never in the same room with them that evening. A board member has already testified to the same fact.

When a resignation is not submitted in writing, courts generally look at the facts and circumstances surrounding the alleged resignation to determine whether one actually occurred.

My position is that even if the discussion with the JD were interpreted as a resignation (which I dispute), I promptly clarified and withdrew any intent to resign as soon as I learned that the events were being mischaracterized.

At that time, the board had not taken any formal action to recognize or accept a resignation. Typically, formal action would involve steps such as:
calling a duly noticed board meeting to address the resignation,
voting to accept the resignation and recording it in the minutes,
announcing a vacancy to the owners, or
sending written confirmation of the resignation.

None of those actions had occurred at the time I clarified my position.

Ultimately, the court will evaluate the facts and determine what actually happened.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
Dean, just out of curiosity, from where are you getting the information " as long as it was in front of 2 or more board members".

A resignation is generally effective when communicated to a president, secretary, or the board at a meeting, often without needing formal acceptance.

But recall, the gathering the evening of nov 19th was a meeting that was called without authority and thus can not be relied upon . no board action or owner actions can have a valid legal standing.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
Dean, just out of curiosity, from where are you getting the information " as long as it was in front of 2 or more board members".

A resignation is generally effective when communicated to a president, secretary, or the board at a meeting, often without needing formal acceptance.

But recall, the gathering the evening of nov 19th was a meeting that was called without authority and thus can not be relied upon . no board action or owner actions can have a valid legal standing.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 6:03 PM
In that email, I stated that I was withdrawing any intent to resign
IMO this is another example of poor communications.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 6:03 PM

At that time, the board had not taken any formal action to recognize or accept a resignation. Typically, formal action would involve steps such as:
calling a duly noticed board meeting to address the resignation,
voting to accept the resignation and recording it in the minutes,
A board vote is never required for a resignation to take effect.

Nor is the board required to formally "recognize" the resignation.

You are making things up.

I can see why the board is frustrated with you.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
ellen, stop putting words in my mouth,, I didn't say required, I said typically.
DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 6:09 PM
Dean, just out of curiosity, from where are you getting the information " as long as it was in front of 2 or more board members".

A resignation is generally effective when communicated to a president, secretary, or the board at a meeting, often without needing formal acceptance.

But recall, the gathering the evening of nov 19th was a meeting that was called without authority and thus can not be relied upon . no board action or owner actions can have a valid legal standing.

How about this, a board member calls 2 board members of 5 member board on the phone and advises their mother is gravely ill and they are resigning effective immediately. Nothing is put in writing, the resignation didn’t occur at a meeting. Is the board supposed to not fill this position?

If this same board member returns 13 months later stating the mother died and they are now ready to serve, is the board required to give their seat back?

And no, I don’t recall any events of Nov 19 because I was not there. All I have is one version of a story. In court, sworn testimony is going to be taken and hopefully the all the versions of what occurred on the 19th will become part of the record for a judge to consider.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
ellen read this twice, so you don't misinterpret.

acceptance is not required for a resignation to occur. I never said that was a requirement.

I said A board director can generally withdraw a resignation at any time before it has been formally accepted or acted upon

Therefore, if the judge finds that a resignation occurred. My secondary argument is I submitted a withdrawl before the board formally accepted or acted upon any such resignation.

LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
once the board fills the vacant seat a resignation is final.. that's what i've found in my research.
DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 9:57 PM
ellen read this twice, so you don't misinterpret.

acceptance is not required for a resignation to occur. I never said that was a requirement.

I said A board director can generally withdraw a resignation at any time before it has been formally accepted or acted upon

Therefore, if the judge finds that a resignation occurred. My secondary argument is I submitted a withdrawl before the board formally accepted or acted upon any such resignation.


You sound like the angry employee who told his supervisor he quit in Thursday and Friday wants his job back with the argument the company hasn’t posted the job opening yet. Good luck with that logic.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 9:51 PM
ellen, stop putting words in my mouth,, I didn't say required, I said typically.
It is not typical. What you wrote is flatly wrong. A volunteer never, ever needs approval to have a resignation be effective instantly.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 9:58 PM
once the board fills the vacant seat a resignation is final.. that's what i've found in my research.
Not so.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/08/2026 9:57 PM

I said A board director can generally withdraw a resignation at any time before it has been formally accepted or acted upon.
The only time a resignation may be lawfully withdrawn is if the stated resignation date is in the future, and this date has not arrived yet.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
Ok, i give up. the atmosphere here is toxic.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
Dean there is a huge difference in employment law and employee resignations vs a non profit director hypothetical resignation.

I never delivered my intent to resign to the board. I never talked to the board. I never asked JD to go tell the board I resign.

I discussed with JD ,conditions and requirements that I wanted before i would consider resigning. None of the conditions or criteria have been met.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
for the record.

Under Texas law, specifically Texas Business Organizations Code Section 21.4091 (applicable to non-profits via Chapter 22), a director's resignation is revocable before it takes effect, unless the notice of resignation expressly states it is irrevocable.

DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/09/2026 7:19 PM
for the record.

Under Texas law, specifically Texas Business Organizations Code Section 21.4091 (applicable to non-profits via Chapter 22), a director's resignation is revocable before it takes effect, unless the notice of resignation expressly states it is irrevocable.


“I quit” seems like an immediate resignation. Please explain how to revoke this resignation before it took effect. Now, if someone says I quit effective Nov. 1st, that’s a different issue.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/09/2026 7:19 PM
Under Texas law, specifically Texas Business Organizations Code Section 21.4091 (applicable to non-profits via Chapter 22)
BO 21 applies to for-profit corporations. Chapter 21 does not apply "via Chapter 22" to your HOA or any non-profit.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
your explanations and criticisms are getting really sloppy..

"The only time a resignation may be lawfully withdrawn is if the stated resignation date is in the future, and this date has not arrived yet."

Your statement is wrong because the law does not limit withdrawal to only one “lawful way.” A resignation isn’t like a contract that has only one approved cancellation method. It’s simply a notice that someone intends to step down. Until it actually takes legal effect, the person can generally change their mind.
DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/09/2026 9:06 PM
your explanations and criticisms are getting really sloppy..

"The only time a resignation may be lawfully withdrawn is if the stated resignation date is in the future, and this date has not arrived yet."

Your statement is wrong because the law does not limit withdrawal to only one “lawful way.” A resignation isn’t like a contract that has only one approved cancellation method. It’s simply a notice that someone intends to step down. Until it actually takes legal effect, the person can generally change their mind.

Good luck with that argument.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 1,289
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By DeanJ on 03/10/2026 6:11 AM
Posted By LaskaS on 03/09/2026 9:06 PM
your explanations and criticisms are getting really sloppy..

"The only time a resignation may be lawfully withdrawn is if the stated resignation date is in the future, and this date has not arrived yet."

Your statement is wrong because the law does not limit withdrawal to only one “lawful way.” A resignation isn’t like a contract that has only one approved cancellation method. It’s simply a notice that someone intends to step down. Until it actually takes legal effect, the person can generally change their mind.


Good luck with that argument.
Indeed.
BillD16 (Texas)
Posts: 941
Posted:
If I may ask: any idea the next event in this case might happen?

Bill

HOA Board ex-President
Austin, Texas USA

“You can’t put too much water in a nuclear reactor”
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
yes,, the case will continue april 7th..

In the meantime, the current board is literally not even showing up to meetings.
Tonight was the annual meeting and 5 of the 9 board members didn't bother to show up.
The board has a duty to ensure the property is managed and maintained in accordance with association obligations. This is not being done. Instead, there is a property manager who doesn't know what he is doing, hasn't figured out how to use a computer properly, and the majority of the board don't want to admit they made a mistake in hiring him. Instead of investigating reported concerns about the lack of proper management and maintenance, the board and property manager blame the messenger. Its textbook dysfunction.
DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/19/2026 12:33 AM
yes,, the case will continue april 7th..

In the meantime, the current board is literally not even showing up to meetings.
Tonight was the annual meeting and 5 of the 9 board members didn't bother to show up.
The board has a duty to ensure the property is managed and maintained in accordance with association obligations. This is not being done. Instead, there is a property manager who doesn't know what he is doing, hasn't figured out how to use a computer properly, and the majority of the board don't want to admit they made a mistake in hiring him. Instead of investigating reported concerns about the lack of proper management and maintenance, the board and property manager blame the messenger. Its textbook dysfunction.

While a bit odd 5 board members didn’t attend the annual meeting, your HOA likely has no requirement for them to be there. The president or VP is usually required to preside over the meeting and if the treasurer was present to provide a financial report and the secretary was present to provide the previous annual meeting minutes and to record minutes of the current meeting, that’s adequate.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
dean,

Because our annual meeting never makes quorum. The board also scheduled the monthly board meeting for this night. But since only 4 showed up, we didn't have a quorum to conduct any business. This is the 2nd month in a row that no association business was properly addressed. Last month, the president spent the entire meeting going over the minutes from the January meeting. The minutes are not reflecting what actually happened. The president will change the minutes to reflect what he wanted to happen. When i get a copy of the preliminary minutes, I send in my revisions requests to reflect what actually happened. At the meeting, the president went item by item, and then would say, "do you want my version of Laskas". Minutes can easily be manipulated by a rogue board.
DeanJ
Posts: 1,786
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/23/2026 12:04 AM
dean,

Because our annual meeting never makes quorum. The board also scheduled the monthly board meeting for this night. But since only 4 showed up, we didn't have a quorum to conduct any business. This is the 2nd month in a row that no association business was properly addressed. Last month, the president spent the entire meeting going over the minutes from the January meeting. The minutes are not reflecting what actually happened. The president will change the minutes to reflect what he wanted to happen. When i get a copy of the preliminary minutes, I send in my revisions requests to reflect what actually happened. At the meeting, the president went item by item, and then would say, "do you want my version of Laskas". Minutes can easily be manipulated by a rogue board.

The minutes might say 15 minutes into the meeting a space craft landed and 3 owners were eaten by space aliens. The minutes have to be approved by the quorum and hopefully the people present at the last meeting will correct the record.
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,044
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LaskaS on 03/06/2026 11:45 AM
good afternoon.

The defense claims that I verbally resigned at a special meeting of owners, that the resignation was effective immediately, and that it was irrevocable. Their evidence primarily consists of testimony from several board members who say they heard me say the words “I resign.” The board later produced minutes stating that I resigned and that the board accepted the resignation.

My account of what happened is different.

When we returned upstairs, people were standing around waiting for the meeting to begin. During that time I believed the my removal by a vote was imminent. I asked jd a question: if I were ever to consider resigning, I would require certain conditions and assurances from the board. JD and I discussed those conditions. He then left to speak with the board.

I do think the Board may have an argument here.

You said that you would need certain conditions and assurances from the board if you were to resign.
Perhaps they agreed to those terms and you left the meeting before they could tell you.

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