The HOA Bulldozed My Fence, Then My Barn Camera Answered In Court-mdue - Chainityai

The HOA Bulldozed My Fence, Then My Barn Camera Answered In Court-mdue

The lake was perfectly still when the bulldozer came.

That was the first thing I noticed, even before the engine.

Cedar Lake usually moved in small silver wrinkles along the gravel bank, but that morning it held itself flat, as if the whole property had stopped breathing.

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Then metal ground against dirt at the edge of my access road.

I stepped onto the porch and saw the yellow machine rolling off a flatbed, its blade already pointed toward my eastern fence.

Pamela Coington stood behind it in a navy HOA jacket and black sunglasses, looking at my land like she had already taken possession.

I had rebuilt that place with my own hands.

The house had been abandoned since the recession, roof sagging, barn cracked, shoreline swallowed by reeds, and every easy buyer had walked away from it.

I walked it twice and made an offer the same afternoon.

For fourteen months I lived in sawdust and mud.

I replaced the roof, reinforced the barn, drilled the well, wired the battery backup, cleared the shoreline, and built the cedar fence along the eastern boundary one post at a time.

That fence was not decoration.

It was the line between what I owned and what other people wanted to pretend they could reach.

Before I ever signed the closing papers, I had checked the county parcel database.

Parcel ML4471B sat outside Lakeside Pines, the subdivision governed by Pamela’s homeowners association.

Not near the line.

Not almost inside.

Outside.

The survey said it, the deed said it, and the county map said it.

Pamela did not care what the county map said.

She came to my gate in late spring with a blue envelope and the smile of someone used to turning requests into orders.

She said the Lakeside Pines HOA had voted to expand its community service area, and my property would be automatically included next quarter.

There would be dues, exterior rules, compliance inspections, and what she called aesthetic alignment.

I asked her one question.

Did my parcel fall within the legal boundary of her association?

She smiled like I was a child asking why the sky belonged to anyone.

“You will find cooperation is in your best interest,” she said.

She left the blue envelope on my gate rail and drove away.

Inside was a notice of mandatory membership, stamped with the LPHA seal and signed by Pamela herself.

It looked official enough to scare someone who had not done the reading.

I had done the reading.

That night I spread my deed, title insurance, survey, and county printouts across the kitchen table.

The answer was so clean it almost felt boring.

My land was not encumbered by any homeowners association declaration.

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