A couple fed nearby ducks. Now, their HOA is threatening to foreclose.

Authored by washingtonpost.com and submitted by Not-original

Listen 5 min Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share

A Texas couple has put their house up for sale after their homeowners’ association sued and threatened to foreclose on their home. Their offense, according to the suit: feeding the ducks that roam their subdivision outside Houston. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight Kathleen Rowe, 65, and her husband George moved into the home across from a waterway in Cypress, Tex., about a decade ago, soon after their only child died. She found feeding the ducks therapeutic and has continued ever since, according to their attorney, Richard Weaver.

In June, the Lakeland Community Homeowners Association decided it had had enough of the Rowes feeding the waterfowl despite what it said were repeated warnings not to. The association filed suit against the couple in Harris County Civil Court, asking a judge for a “permanent mandatory injunction requiring Defendants to cease from feeding any wildlife” in the neighborhood and up to $250,000 in damages, Texas’s standard minimum for such lawsuits.

Feeding the ducks “runs afoul of the general plan and scheme of Subdivision” and has caused “imminent harm and irreparable injury to the Plaintiff,” the lawsuit reads. The lawsuit asks the court for permission for the HOA to foreclose on the property if the Rowes continue to feed the ducks.

An attorney for the homeowners’ association did not respond to requests for comment Saturday.

Weaver said this litigation stands out among the others he’s defended against.

“I’m a board-certified real estate attorney, and this lawsuit is truly the silliest lawsuit I’ve ever seen in my practice,” Weaver said. “This attorney has essentially claimed that feeding ducks is either noxious or offensive — I think that’s an incredible statement.”

Weaver said ducks are common in the neighborhood and are even visible on Google Maps street view in front of the Rowe’s home. Kathleen decided to start feeding the ducks because many of them were raised in pet stores and purchased by families for events such as Easter, then released into the wild, according to Weaver.

“They’ve never had a mother,” Kathleen told the Houston Chronicle. “I feel like I’m just stepping in.”

Pet ducks released into the wild often struggle to survive and can harm native species, the Oregonian reported. Feeding ducks can cause nutritional problems for the waterfowl and lead them to lose their natural fear of humans, according to the New York Department of Environmental Conservation.

The lawsuit accuses the Rowes of violating four HOA rules, including one prohibiting “any noxious or offensive activity” that could disturb other residents, and another barring any activity that may “materially disturb or destroy” wildlife in the community.

Weaver said he will “put the HOA’s feet to the fire” and force it to prove that the Rowes are violating the rules by feeding the ducks.

“I understand that maybe some people in the neighborhood want these ducks not to be in their community, but just from a human being perspective, we have worse things going on in the world,” Weaver said.

Weaver said it is common for homeowners’ associations to file suits that threaten foreclosure, and he has seen families lose their homes over fines as low as $3,000. Usually, though, those lawsuits involve allegations of building in violation of deed restrictions or painting a house the wrong color, not feeding wildlife, Weaver said.

“They have used a common threat against an uncommon situation,” he said.

Several squabbles between residents and homeowners’ associations attempting to enforce strict aesthetic standards have gained high profiles in recent years.

In 2017, a Maryland man won a seven-year court fight against his HOA over a requirement that every house in his community install a $500 monogrammed mailbox.

Later that year, after an HOA in Colorado ordered a resident to clear decorations from his yard, the man instead installed a sign criticizing the HOA.

Weaver said he is confident that the Rowes will prevail and has already filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, but said Kathleen Rowe decided to proactively put the home up for sale just in case.

“As you can imagine, as a homeowner and a defendant in the lawsuit, she was frightened at that number, with the threat of foreclosure and losing her home,” Weaver said. “So what she decided to do was beat the HOA to the punch by hurrying up and selling her home before anything bad could happen to her.”

Weaver said he believes the couple would like to stay in the home if they win in court.

“I think she would like to continue to live there and take care of these ducks,” he said.

sittingmongoose on July 10th, 2022 at 16:26 UTC »

We have a somewhat related experience. When we moved in we had some cute little squirrels on our porch. So my fiancé stated giving them nuts. Soon they would come begging for nuts and even take them right out of our hands. It was adorable…until they started demanding nuts…I shit you not; they would actually jump on our doors and door handles to get in. They would be right there when we opened the door. Throwing themselves at the glass on our doors. It was like we were under siege from squirrels. They also started digging through all the plants and destroying them. We stopped feeding them and they eventually went away. Took like 6 months though.

Tldr; we stupidly fed adorable squirrels nuts until they laid siege on our home…

didimao0072000 on July 10th, 2022 at 14:24 UTC »

Before getting out the pitchforks, here the side from someone who lives in her neighborhood:

There is way, way more to this story. I live in the neighborhood. Pretty close to this lady actually. It’s a nightmare.

They aren’t being sued for $250k. It’s a click bait, terrible headline. When filing a petition, lawyers are required state in all petitions what they are seeking monetary relief of $250k or less because that is what triggers the Discovery Plan Level. That’s all that number is, it is not the amount of damages being sought. The suit is not seeking any money other than attorneys fees. The relief sought is specifically outlined as, “Plaintiff request that the court award it a temporary and permanent injunction requiring Defendants to cease from feeding wildlife, including but not limited to ducks or other fowl, within the community.” They are also seeking to enforce the lien that every HOA has against a home and that the HOA may foreclose on the home if the Defendants don’t abide by the court’s injunction.

This has been going on for years. The homeowners refused to address the issue. It’s not some overnight thing.

I like how the article shows her with like 4 ducks. The problem is far more than 4 ducks. Try 50+

This shitshow (it is actually creating a LITERAL shitshow) caused by this lady has impacted the people that live around her. There’s duck crap everywhere. The ducks have destroyed neighbors yards and front porches. Some ducks have been killed due to the sheer amount that congregate in the road. People have been attacked by the ducks. Homeowners had tried to address this with her themselves and she’s not exactly been nice about it.

They have been told repeatedly, for years to stop. Even by game wardens but have refused. They decided to call the HOAs bluff and got burned.

There will be a huge block party when these dipshits move.

jessejamesvan111 on July 10th, 2022 at 14:03 UTC »

When new people move into my neighborhood I slip it into convo. Nice to meet you. We don't feed the ducks.