A Fake HOA Threatened His Ranch. The Records Exposed Everything-Ginny

The first letter arrived 3 months after I bought the ranch.

It was folded clean inside a white envelope with red print stamped across the top, the kind of red that makes ordinary paper look official before you even read it.

Boone was barking somewhere near the fence line, his deep bark rolling across the dry grass and through the kitchen window seams.

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I stood at the counter with coffee cooling beside my hand, reading the words once, then twice, then a third time.

According to the Cedar Ridge Landowners Association, I owed $640 in unpaid dues, late penalties, and administrative fees.

If I failed to pay within 30 days, they reserved the right to place a lien against my property.

My first thought was that somebody had the wrong address.

My second thought was worse.

They knew exactly where to send it.

By then, I had spent 21 years managing logistics operations for manufacturing companies in Dallas.

That sounds more impressive than it felt.

Mostly it meant airports, fluorescent lights, rental cars that smelled like disinfectant, and conference calls where six people took two hours to discuss what one competent person could have solved before lunch.

One Tuesday afternoon, I looked at my calendar and saw meetings every half hour from 7:00 in the morning until almost 6:00 at night for the next 11 days.

Something inside me did not break.

It simply turned off.

Six months later, I owned a stucco ranch house from the 70s, a barn that leaned just enough to worry me, a rusted windmill that screamed in the wind, and 117 acres outside Dry Creek, New Mexico.

I wanted peace.

Not status.

Not luxury.

Peace.

The seller had disclosed easements.

The title company had checked the records.

Melissa Granger, my attorney, had handled the closing and reviewed every recorded restriction attached to that parcel.

There was an access easement on the north road and utility rights near the creek.

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