Michigan condominium associations are administered by the association of co-owners under the Condominium Act, with records open to co-owners under MCL 559.157. Non-condo HOAs are governed by their declaration plus the Nonprofit Corporation Act (MCL 450.2101 et seq.), which sets meeting, voting, and board rules.
For condominiums, MCL 559.157 requires that "[t]he books, records, contracts, and financial statements concerning the administration and operation of the condominium project shall be available for examination by any of the co-owners and their mortgagees at convenient times." An association with annual revenues over $20,000 must have its books independently audited or reviewed by a CPA each year, unless a majority of members vote to opt out. Day-to-day governance β board elections, meetings, and voting β is set by the recorded bylaws under the Condominium Act. Most Michigan condo and non-condo associations are also incorporated as nonprofit corporations, so the Nonprofit Corporation Act (MCL 450.2101 et seq.) supplies default rules on directors, member meetings, and voting where the documents are silent.
Refusing a co-owner reasonable access to books and records can violate MCL 559.157; skipping the required annual CPA audit/review (without a valid majority opt-out) is non-compliance. Nonprofit-corporation governance failures are addressed under MCL 450.2101 et seq. There is no fixed statutory penalty for a single records denial.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Lansing, MI
Lansing permits construction during standard daytime hours. Construction is generally allowed from 7 AM to 9 PM Monday through Saturday. Sunday construction ...
Lansing, MI
Lansing addresses barking dogs under Chapter 654 (Noise) and Chapter 610 (Animals). Owning or harboring any animal that frequently makes sounds creating a no...
Lansing, MI
Lansing prohibits unreasonably loud or disturbing noise under Chapter 662 of the Code of Ordinances. Quiet hours run from 10:00 PM to 7:00 AM in residential ...
Lansing, MI
Lansing restricts the storage of recreational vehicles, boats, and trailers in residential areas. Street parking of these vehicles is limited and storage mus...
Lansing, MI
Lansing restricts parking of large commercial vehicles in residential areas. Heavy trucks and semi-trailers may not be stored in residential zones.
Lansing, MI
Lansing regulates on-street parking through Chapter 1042 and the Parking Services Division. No vehicle may park in one location on a public street for more t...
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