HOA Selective Enforcement Defense — Texas | Silachi Law Firm

✓ Texas §202.004 — $200/day in statutory damages for every day of arbitrary HOA enforcement

Texas §202.004 · Selective Enforcement

Your neighbors do the same thing.
Only you get fined.

Selective enforcement is not just unfair — it is illegal under Texas law. Section 202.004 of the Texas Property Code prohibits arbitrary or capricious enforcement of deed restrictions and awards $200 per day in statutory damages against HOAs that continue enforcing after being put on notice. If your neighbors have the same alleged violation and the HOA has done nothing about them, you have a legal claim — not just a grievance.

Get Your Free 15-Minute Analysis → No obligation · Direct response within 1 business day
Do You Have a Selective Enforcement Claim?

Answer three questions. Know where you stand.

Texas courts have identified the core elements of a selective enforcement claim under §202.004. The strength of your claim depends on how many of these you can establish with evidence.

1. Can you identify neighbors with the same or similar alleged violation who have not been cited by the HOA?

Strong foundation. Three or more documented comparators is the threshold Texas courts look for in §202.004 selective enforcement claims. Date-stamp your photos of the neighboring violations today — the date matters for damages calculations.

Build the record before the consultation. Drive the neighborhood this week. Photograph every property with the same alleged violation — fence, parking, landscaping, exterior — and note the addresses. Date-stamp every photo. Three comparators with documented dates creates a viable claim. One anecdotal comparator does not.

Selective enforcement alone may not be your strongest path. Without comparators, the §202.004 claim is difficult to sustain. However, your §209 procedural rights still apply fully — notice defects, hearing rights, cure period violations, and collection defects. The consultation will identify which levers are available given your facts.

2. Have you put the comparator evidence in writing to the HOA board?

Your §202.004(c) damages clock is running. The date you submitted comparator evidence in writing to the board is the date "knowing arbitrary enforcement" began. Statutory damages of $200 per day per violation accrue from the day after that submission — as long as the HOA continued to enforce against you. Calculate the number of days and multiply by $200. That is your damages floor.

Verbal notice does not start the §202.004(c) clock. Send the comparator evidence in writing today — certified mail to the board president and to the management company — with photographs, addresses, and dates. The day you deliver that letter is Day 1 of the damages calculation. Every day the HOA continues to enforce against you after receiving that letter is another $200.

Send it today. The §202.004(c) damages clock does not start until you put the evidence in front of the board in writing. Nothing stops you from sending it right now. A certified letter to the board president with photographs of the comparator violations and their addresses is the document that starts the clock and creates the "knowing arbitrary enforcement" element of your claim.

3. Has the HOA continued enforcing against you after receiving the comparator evidence?

This is the strongest §202.004(c) posture. Continued enforcement after documented receipt of comparator evidence is the "knowing arbitrary" element. Courts have awarded statutory damages at $200/day in this posture. Your damages claim is now a counterclaim — not just a defense. That changes the HOA's litigation calculus entirely.

Escalation after evidence submission is powerful evidence. An HOA that sends the matter to a law firm or threatens foreclosure after receiving written comparator evidence has now exposed its board and management to the full §202.004(c) statutory damages claim. The fee-shifting provisions under §5.006 and §209.008 stack on top. The HOA's litigation cost exposure now significantly exceeds the original fine amount in most cases.

Hold your position and document everything. If the HOA paused enforcement after receiving your evidence, that pause itself is evidence of the arbitrary nature of the original enforcement. Do not assume the matter is resolved — HOAs frequently resume enforcement after a period of inaction. Keep your comparator photos dated and your written record intact. The consultation can help you determine whether a declaratory judgment action makes sense to permanently resolve the issue.

The Legal Framework

What §202.004 actually says — and what it means for you

Section 202.004 of the Texas Property Code has two operative parts that work together. Understanding both is essential to understanding your claim.

§202.004(a) — The Prohibition

"A property owners' association or other representative designated by an owner may not selectively enforce a restriction against an owner in an arbitrary or capricious manner."

This is the affirmative prohibition. The HOA cannot enforce a restriction against you while ignoring the same restriction as applied to other owners — without a legitimate, non-arbitrary justification. The burden of proving a legitimate justification is on the HOA once you establish the pattern.

§202.004(c) — The Damages

"A court may assess civil damages for a violation of Subsection (a) in an amount not to exceed $200 for each day of the violation."

This is the remedy. $200 per day per violation — not per incident. If the HOA is enforcing three separate alleged violations against you while ignoring the same three violations by neighbors, the damages exposure is $600 per day. The clock starts when the HOA had documented knowledge of the discriminatory enforcement and continued anyway.

What the damages can look like
HOA enforcement began (example)
Day 0
Comparator evidence submitted in writing
Day 30
HOA continues enforcement (knowing)
Days 31+
Statutory damages rate
$200 / day
90 days of continued enforcement after notice
$18,000
Plus §5.006 attorney fee shifting
+fees
Total exposure to HOA on $500 fine dispute
$18,000+

This is why documented selective enforcement claims change the settlement calculus. The HOA's exposure can far exceed the original fine amount — which is often the leverage that produces dismissal and resolution.

Build Your Record

The evidence checklist for a §202.004 claim

Selective enforcement claims are won or lost on documentation. Texas courts look for specific types of evidence. Collect everything on this list before your consultation.

  • 1
    Date-stamped photographs of at least 3 comparator properties
    Drive the neighborhood and photograph every property with the same alleged violation. Include the address in each photo or record the address alongside it. The photographs must be dated — use your phone's timestamp or photograph a sign with the date in frame.
    Why it matters: Courts require documented comparators, not assertion. Three properties is the practical minimum.
  • 2
    Written submission of comparator evidence to the board — certified mail, return receipt
    A letter to the board president with the photographs attached, sent certified mail with a return receipt requested. The green card — or proof of delivery — is what establishes the date of the board's "knowing" enforcement. Keep the original green card.
    Why it matters: This is the document that starts the §202.004(c) damages clock.
  • 3
    HOA board meeting minutes showing awareness of non-enforcement
    Request all board meeting minutes for the past 3 years under §209.005. Minutes that show the board discussing the same type of violation for other properties — or acknowledging that enforcement has been inconsistent — are powerful evidence of the "knowing" element.
    Why it matters: Documents the lapse history and board awareness.
  • 4
    Complete violation and fine history for your property
    Request your full violation history under §209.005. This establishes the timeline of enforcement against you and allows comparison to the comparator properties that have had no enforcement history for the same alleged violations.
    Why it matters: Creates the contrast between treatment of your property and comparators.
  • 5
    Any HOA correspondence or statements showing discriminatory intent
    Emails from management singling out your property, statements at board meetings, neighbor testimony, or social media posts by board members that suggest the enforcement is personal or discriminatory rather than neutral and consistent.
    Why it matters: Strengthens the "arbitrary or capricious" element beyond just the numeric comparator evidence.
How the Claims Stack

§202.004 selective enforcement × §209 procedural defects

The most powerful HOA defense combines both levers. §209 procedural defects defeat the demand. §202.004 creates a damages counterclaim. Together they change the HOA's entire litigation calculus.

Strong §209 Defects
Weak / No §209 Defects
Strong §202.004 Evidence
3+ documented comparators, dates submitted to board
Maximum leverage §209 defects defeat the demand. §202.004(c) creates a $200/day damages floor. §5.006 and §209.008 stack fee-shifting. Settlement leverage is at its highest — the HOA's exposure far exceeds the original claim.
Tier 5–6 Case
§202.004 carries alone The statutory damages counterclaim and fee-shifting under §5.006 create settlement leverage even without §209 backstop. Stronger emphasis on damages computation and evidence quality.
Tier 3–5 Depending on Urgency
Weak / No §202.004 Evidence
No comparators or comparators not documented
§209 carries the case Standard §209 defense playbook: TRO if foreclosure is imminent, §209.005 records demand, declaratory judgment on notice defects, §209.008 fee-shift threat.
Tier 3–5 by Urgency
Decline territory Without either lever, the homeowner is disputing a fine she likely owes. A Tier 1 strategy session may provide direction, but representation is unlikely to be cost-effective.
Tier 1 Strategy Session
What Happens Next

What the free 15-minute consultation covers

1
You describe the enforcement situation and what evidence you have
How long enforcement has been occurring, whether you have submitted comparator evidence in writing, whether a lawsuit has been filed, and whether foreclosure has been threatened or scheduled.
2
We assess which levers are active and what the damages exposure looks like
Based on your facts: how strong is the §202.004 comparator record, which §209 defects are present, what the damages calculation looks like, and whether the HOA's exposure exceeds the amount in dispute by enough to drive settlement.
3
You leave knowing whether you have a real claim and what it is worth
Not a generic pep talk — a specific assessment of whether §202.004(c) damages are available, what the approximate range is, and what the next legal steps are to preserve and pursue them.
4
If you proceed, we discuss engagement options at clearly stated flat fees
From a $350 strategy session with written analysis through full declaratory judgment representation with counterclaims. Tier and cost are determined by the strength of your claim and the stage of enforcement.
Free 15-Minute Consultation

They singled you out.
Texas law makes that expensive.

Selective enforcement is not just unfair — it is a statutory violation with a $200-per-day damages remedy. The evidence you collect today determines what your claim is worth tomorrow. A 15-minute conversation is where it starts.

SCHEDULE YOUR FREE CONSULTATION →

832-456-4371  ·  [email protected]  ·  Iowa Colony / Houston Area, TX

This page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice for any individual case. Nothing on this page creates an attorney-client relationship. Texas Property Code citations are accurate as of the date of publication and are subject to legislative amendment. The damages calculations shown are illustrative examples only — actual damages depend on the specific facts and evidence in each case. Consult a licensed Texas attorney about your specific situation. © 2026 Silachi Law Firm, PLLC · Texas Bar No. 24118480 · Iowa Colony, TX