As the directors of a cooperative corporation, co-op board members have a number of duties to their shareholders, chief among them to preserve and improve their investment and to maintain and/or improve shareholders’ standard of living in the building. Along with that responsibility comes the necessity of keeping building community members informed of board meetings, important decisions, and anything that might affect their investment and day-to-day life in the building.
But what happens when board members are unresponsive? What if they don’t return calls, don't hold regular meetings or elections, keep non-board residents in the dark about their building's business, and are generally MIA?
Legally Required
Co-op boards in the state of New York are regulated under one of the state's original statutes created to regulate businesses, the Business Corporation Law (BCL). This statute primarily governs how cooperative corporations, including co-ops, must be run. The BCL provides specific rules regulating the corporate governance practices of co-ops, including the manner in which boards and shareholders conduct meetings, amend bylaws, and vote, and the BCL prescribes the rights and responsibilities of boards and shareholders. While it may be asking a lot of volunteers to study the entire BCL or know its nuances by heart, it's a good idea for all board members to at least be aware of its existence, and better to have a passing familiarity with its contents.
The BCL was implemented over a century ago to regulate governance of corporations in New York, and remained more or less unchanged until it was overhauled in 1998. “The BCL was drafted generally for corporations, [the legislature] didn’t have co-ops in mind, and the courts have applied the BCL to co-ops,” explains Stephen M. Lasser, a partner with the Manhattan-based law firm of Barton, Barton & Plotkin, LLP.
What happens if a co-op’s bylaws are inconsistent with the BCL? The BCL provides that when there is a conflict, the BCL will prevail: “The bylaws may contain any provision relating to the business of the corporation, the conduct of its affairs, its rights or powers or the rights or powers of its shareholders, directors or officers, not inconsistent with this chapter or any other statute of this state or the certificate of incorporation.” The BCL is a default set of rules.
In addition to outlining board responsibilities and shareholder rights, the BCL provides detailed regulations on the manner in which boards and shareholders conduct meetings and do business. The rules outlined in the BCL have the potential to empower shareholders to ensure their boards are performing lawfully. According to Richard Siegler, a partner with the Manhattan-based law firm of Stroock & Stroock & Lavan, LLP, shareholders can potentially bring lawsuits under Article 6 to assert their rights. “Suppose a co-op corporation doesn’t have an annual meeting for two years? Can a shareholder seek to have an annual meeting to elect new directors? The answer is yes—it’s in Article 6—they can have a special meeting to elect directors.”
For shareholder meetings, Section 602 of the BCL allows cooperatives to create their own rules in the bylaws, as these meetings “may be held at such place, within or without this state, as may be fixed by or under the bylaws, or if not so fixed, at the office of the corporation in this state. The BCL does prescribe, however, that annual meetings must be held for the election of directors and transaction of other business. Meetings via conference call or video conference are now permitted by the BCL as long as everyone in the meeting can hear each other at the same time.
“The BCL does not deal explicitly with issues such as who presides during meetings, what parliamentary rules govern, nominating procedures, proper format for committee reports, the method and timing of notices, the format of proxies, or methods by which questions from the floor are fielded,” according to Bruce Cholst, a partner with the Manhattan law firm of Rosen, Livingston & Cholst, LLP. “The absence of clear-cut guidelines regulating the precise manner in which shareholder meetings are noticed and conducted often leads to confusion and sometimes rancor at shareholder meetings. This is particularly the case when insurgent shareholders perceive that the rules are being arbitrarily applied for the sole benefit of the incumbent board,” says Cholst.
Apathy...or Worse?
Under the BCL boards are required to hold annual resident meetings, and also to hold annual elections. As pointed out, apart from that, there is no legal reason compelling board members to communicate regularly and openly with shareholders and other residents. Regardless of how it might seem to non-board residents, when boards are not communicating, it’s not because they are a secret society hellbent on world domination beginning with your co-op; usually, it's just because there’s nothing pressing to communicate.
“The boards I saw that were ‘phantom’ met four times a year because of apathy,” says Anton Cirulli, managing director of Manhattan’s Lawrence Properties. “There were just no issues—they had a strong super or managing agent.”
Or a strong board president. According to Cirulli, in a well-run building he knows, the president of the board has been there for 20 years with great success, and the other board members rubber-stamp whatever he wants to do. There is no revolutionary movement to oust him; on the contrary, the residents are happy to have a strong leader.
“That happens when you have an election, and no one’s running,” he says.
Generally, this happens more in smaller buildings—a Brooklyn Heights brownstone, say—rather than larger, newer high-rises. “The building is financially solvent,” says Cirulli of the two-decade president's particular case. “People are generally happy.”
Of course, there are some people who are never happy, no matter what the situation. A shareholder could die and leave $10 million to the co-op to build the best garden in New York, and rest assured, someone would complain about the bees. It is a rule of thumb among industry pros that five percent of the residents will issue 95 percent of the complaints.
In a co-op this reporter once lived in, one chronic complainer harassed one board member to such an extent that she had to take out a restraining order against him; for reasons clear only to himself he then sued the board—and then complained at the annual meeting about the legal fees stemming from defense of his bogus lawsuit that the co-op had to pay for!
It's a Customer Service Thing
“Boards pay management companies to handle complaints,” says David Kuperberg, CEO of Cooper Square Management in Manhattan. “It’s part of the service. One of the major components of a management company is customer service, and the shareholders are customers.”
Managing agents, then, act as buffers between the boards and the problem residents. “If you have someone who’s just a chronic complainer,” says Enid Hamelin, a property manager with Lawrence Properties and a veteran Manhattan board member, “the managing agent knows how to handle it.”
Boards who utilize their management companies to handle the chronic complainers can wind up with “phantom” reputations, as the chronic complainers tend to complain to whoever happens to ride the elevator with them.
“The only time a resident should ever have to approach a board directly,” says Kuperberg, “is if the managing agent is not responding, or if the board is doing things they shouldn’t be doing.”
Such as criminal behavior?
“No,” he says, laughing. “Micromanaging. Not allowing the management company to do its job. If the board is responding directly to every resident, they are rendering the management company ineffective.”
While there are compelling reasons for boards to communicate to the residents—of which more shortly—they are advised, in case-by-case situations, to use the management company. “Defer to the managing agent,” says Hamelin. “The managing agent should respond immediately.”
“For individual issues, boards` should respond that we have forwarded your request to the management company, and the management company will respond on our behalf,” Kuperberg says.
In fact, between the board members and the property managers, there is not much lack of communication going on.
“We pick up the slack,” says Cirulli. “We respond. ‘We’ve gotten your letter, we put it on the agenda, we’ll get back to you shortly,’ That’s generally 99 percent of the battle.”
Speak Up
That said, it can be in the best interests of the board to keep residents in the loop.
“Communication is so important,” says Hamelin. “If you don’t communicate, it fuels animosity and resentment.”
More often than not, what most people really want when they lodge a complaint—even the chronic complainers—is to be acknowledged that their voice has been heard. No one likes to be ignored.
“What you want to do is answer immediately, within 24 hours,” says Hamelin. “When I was on the board, we tried to answer immediately, even to touch base, or else people felt abandoned.”
This doesn’t mean the board should open every meeting to every resident, just that it should let people know what’s coming down the pike. A newsletter announcing a new initiative to renovate the lobby, for example, followed by a town hall meeting, is better than announcing it fait accompli—or not announcing it at all.
Again, there’s no law compelling a board to do this. It just makes good business sense. We all want to live in a building where things move smoothly.
“It’s more a question of etiquette and people’s style,” Hamelin says.
One newfangled way to get people talking is using systems like Building Link, which is an Internet-based system that manages all day-to-day communications, record-keeping and task tracking between occupants, building staff and property managers in residential buildings. Hamelin reports than many buildings are now using these services, with positive results.
At the end of the day, it comes down to respect. People like to feel noticed. Responding to an email with a boilerplate “I got your note and have sent it to the manager” can go a long way to fostering harmony in your building community.
Greg Olear is a freelance writer and author and a frequent contributor to The Cooperator.
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