Case Summary
| Case ID | 25F-H076-REL |
|---|---|
| Agency | Arizona Department of Real Estate |
| Tribunal | — |
| Decision Date | 2025-11-18 |
| Administrative Law Judge | SF |
| Outcome | Petitioner failed to meet his burden that the documents were not made reasonably available and that Respondent failed to meet their requirement to produce those documents within ten days. |
| Filing Fees Refunded | — |
| Civil Penalties | — |
Parties & Counsel
| Petitioner | JOHN R KRAHN LIVING TRUST / JANET KRAHN LIVING TRUST | Counsel | — |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respondent | TONTO FOREST ESTATES HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION | Counsel | — |
Alleged Violations
No violations listed
Video Overview
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
25F-H076-REL Decision – 1356556.pdf
25F-H076-REL Decision – 1357642.pdf
25F-H076-REL Decision – 1359021.pdf
25F-H076-REL Decision – 1369428.pdf
Briefing Document: Krahn Living Trust v. Tonto Forest Estates HOA (Case No. 25F-H076-REL)
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the proceedings and outcome of Case No. 25F-H076-REL, heard by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH). The case centered on a petition filed by the John R Krahn Living Trust (“Petitioner”) against the Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association (“Respondent”), alleging a violation of A.R.S. § 33-1805 for failing to provide association records within the statutory 10-business-day deadline.
The Petitioner’s case was built on the assertion that a valid written request was sent via email on June 1, 2025, to the HOA Secretary, followed by another email and two voicemails. The Petitioner presented extensive arguments based on the legal principle of “rebuttable presumption of receipt” and a statistical analysis claiming the probability of all communication attempts failing was astronomically low, thus evidencing bad faith and intentional non-compliance by the Respondent.
The Respondent’s defense was that they never received the email or voicemails in question. They argued that email is an unreliable communication method and that the burden of proof for delivery and receipt rested solely with the Petitioner. They further contended that established protocol required requests to be made through the community manager.
The final decision, issued by Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Samuel Fox, found in favor of the Respondent. The ruling hinged on a Cease and Desist letter issued by the HOA to the Petitioner in March 2025. The ALJ determined this letter established a new, “reasonable” process for communication, requiring the Petitioner to submit all future correspondence via physical mail to the management office. By sending his request via email, the Petitioner disregarded this specific directive. Consequently, the ALJ concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet his burden of proof, as a reasonable method for submitting requests was available but was not used.
Case Overview
Case Number
25F-H076-REL
Tribunal
Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)
Presiding Judge
Samuel Fox, Administrative Law Judge
Petitioner
John R Krahn Living Trust / Janet Krahn Living Trust (Represented by John R. Krahn)
Respondent
Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association (Represented by Dwight A. Jolivette, President)
Core Allegation
Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide requested association records within the statutory 10-business-day deadline.
Final Outcome
Respondent deemed the prevailing party.
Chronology of Key Events
March 21, 2025
Respondent issues a formal Cease and Desist letter to Petitioner, directing that future correspondence be submitted in writing and mailed to the management office.
June 1, 2025
Petitioner sends an email with a records request to three known email addresses for HOA Secretary Kenneth Riley.
June 3, 2025
Petitioner sends a follow-up email to the same three addresses.
June 16, 2025 (approx.)
The 10-business-day statutory deadline for a response passes.
June 23, 2025
Petitioner leaves voicemail messages for Secretary Riley and Community Manager Barbara Bonilla regarding the overdue request.
July 25, 2025
Petitioner files a petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging a violation of A.R.S. § 33-1805.
September 29, 2025
A subpoena is issued in the matter.
October 3, 2025
ALJ Fox issues an order quashing the September 29 subpoena.
October 6, 2025
Petitioner submits a Motion to Reconsider.
October 14, 2025
ALJ Fox denies the Motion to Reconsider and a motion for summary judgment, and sets preliminary disclosure deadlines for October 24, 2025.
October 29, 2025
The administrative hearing is held.
November 18, 2025
ALJ Fox issues the final decision, ruling in favor of the Respondent.
Petitioner’s Central Arguments and Evidence
The Petitioner’s case was built on the premise that multiple, redundant communication attempts were made in good faith and that the Respondent’s claim of non-receipt was statistically impossible and indicative of bad faith.
• Statutory Compliance: The Petitioner argued that A.R.S. § 33-1805 simply requires a “written request” and that his emails on June 1 and June 3 satisfied this requirement. He stated, “Email is in writing and is a method used extensively by respondent.”
• Proper Recipient: The request was directed to HOA Secretary Ken Riley, who, according to bylaw 5.5, “shall have charge of all of the association’s books, records, and papers.” The Petitioner included this bylaw in his email to the Secretary.
• Rebuttable Presumption of Receipt: The Petitioner cited Arizona case law (Lee v. State) and the “mailbox rule,” arguing that sending an email to a correct, functioning address without a bounce notification creates a legal presumption of receipt. This, he claimed, shifted the burden to the Respondent to prove non-receipt with evidence such as server logs, which they failed to provide.
• Evidence of Intentional Evasion: The Petitioner introduced an email from Secretary Riley dated October 13, 2025 (Exhibit 6), as proof of intentional obstruction. In it, Mr. Riley stated:
◦ “You are currently blocked from sending emails to my work and will continue to be blocked.”
◦ “since your email earlier email did not bounce you clearly know I have seen it.” The Petitioner argued this was a “direct admission that the absence of a bounce notification to a known good email address confirms receipt.”
• Statistical Improbability of Failure: A core part of the Petitioner’s argument was a mathematical analysis suggesting the probability of all communication attempts failing was infinitesimal.
◦ The odds of four emails failing was calculated as 1 in 6.25 million.
◦ The odds of two independent voicemails failing was calculated as 1 in 10,000.
◦ The combined probability of all six attempts failing was stated to be “approximately 1 in 62.5 billion.”
• Pattern of Non-Compliance: The Petitioner claimed this was the Respondent’s “fourth time they violate 1805” and that this pattern justified a civil penalty to deter future misconduct.
Respondent’s Central Arguments and Evidence
The Respondent’s defense was centered on a simple claim of non-receipt, the unreliability of electronic communication, and the assertion that the Petitioner failed to follow the proper procedure for requests.
• Claim of Non-Receipt: The Respondent’s primary position was, “Our position is very simple, straightforward. We didn’t get it.” They framed the dispute as a “he said she said situation where neither side can definitively prove their position.”
• Unreliability of Technology: Respondent’s representative, Dwight Jolivette, drew on his military background in information systems to argue that technology is not perfectly reliable. He cited potential issues like work-controlled laptops, server filters, travel, and other variables as reasons the email may not have been delivered. He stated, “technology especially in the communications area as much as we like to believe opposite is not as reliable as people think.”
• Burden of Proof: The Respondent consistently maintained that the burden was on the Petitioner to prove that the “email reached its intended destination.” They argued, “How are we supposed to respond to an email that we don’t have?”
• Cease and Desist Directive: The Respondent argued that a cease and desist letter sent in March 2025 established a specific communication protocol for the Petitioner, requiring him to use U.S. mail for all correspondence with the management company.
• Established Protocol: Mr. Jolivette testified that the unwritten “best practice” was for records requests to be sent to the community manager, who holds the documents, rather than the volunteer board secretary.
• Submitted Evidence: Respondent submitted written statements (Exhibits A and B) from Secretary Ken Riley and Community Manager Barbara Bonilla, both stating they had no record of receiving the emails or voicemails in question.
Final Decision and Rationale
ALJ Samuel Fox’s decision on November 18, 2025, sided with the Respondent. The ruling did not focus on the technical arguments about email delivery but on the legal standard of “reasonability” established by A.R.S. § 33-1805.
• Key Findings of Fact:
◦ On March 21, 2025, Respondent issued a Cease and Desist letter demanding the Petitioner stop email communication with the community manager.
◦ The letter specified a new procedure: “any concerns or correspondence must be submitted in written form and mailed to the Association’s management office at the following address.”
◦ The letter also stated that Respondent would continue to comply with records requests.
◦ Prior to this letter, it was undisputed that the community manager was the appropriate recipient for such requests.
• Conclusions of Law and Rationale:
◦ The ALJ determined that A.R.S. § 33-1805 does not prohibit an association from establishing a specific, reasonable process for requesting documents.
◦ The Cease and Desist letter provided a “clear process for future requests” for this specific Petitioner.
◦ The requirement to submit requests via physical mail was deemed “reasonable.”
◦ The decision states, “the preponderance of the evidence established that Respondent informed Petitioner about how to submit future requests, and Petitioner disregarded that information.”
◦ The final conclusion was that the Petitioner “failed to meet his burden that the documents were not made reasonably available and that Respondent failed to meet their requirement to produce those documents within ten days.”
The judge noted that the outcome would have been different if the Petitioner had been completely prohibited from contacting the community manager, but the letter provided a specific, alternative method of contact (mail) which the Petitioner chose not to use.
Case Study Guide: John R. Krahn Living Trust v. Tonto Forest Estates HOA
This study guide provides a comprehensive analysis of the legal dispute between the John R. Krahn Living Trust and the Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association (HOA), adjudicated under Case No. 25F-H076-REL at the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH).
I. Key Legal Concepts and Statutes
A. Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1805
The central statute in this matter governs the availability of association records. It mandates that all financial and other records of an HOA must be made "reasonably available" for examination by any member. Once a written request is made, the association has 10 business days to fulfill it.
B. Burden of Proof: Preponderance of the Evidence
In administrative hearings of this nature, the Petitioner bears the burden of proof. They must demonstrate that the Respondent violated the statute by a "preponderance of the evidence," meaning the contention is "more probably true than not." Conversely, the Respondent bears the same burden for any affirmative defenses raised.
C. The "Mailbox Rule" and Rebuttable Presumption
This legal principle suggests that proof of proper mailing (or, by analogy, sending an email to a functioning address) creates a rebuttable presumption that the recipient received the communication. In this case, the Petitioner argued that the lack of a "bounce notification" for his emails functioned as near-certain proof of delivery.
D. Administrative Reasonability
The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) interpreted A.R.S. § 33-1805 through the lens of "reasonability." The statute does not prohibit associations from establishing specific processes for requests, nor does it mandate that associations must accept requests via email, provided a reasonably accessible method (such as physical mail) is available.
II. Case Timeline and Factual Background
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| March 21, 2025 | HOA issues a formal Cease and Desist (C&D) letter to Petitioner, requiring all future correspondence to be sent via physical mail to the management office. |
| June 1, 2025 | Petitioner sends an email record request to Secretary Kenneth Riley at three known email addresses. |
| June 3, 2025 | Petitioner sends a follow-up email regarding the June 1st request. |
| June 16, 2025 | The statutory 10-business-day deadline for the June 1st request expires. |
| June 23, 2025 | Petitioner leaves voicemails for Secretary Riley and Community Manager Barbara Bonilla. |
| July 25, 2025 | Petitioner files a formal petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging a violation of A.R.S. § 33-1805. |
| Oct 29, 2025 | Formal hearing held at the OAH in Phoenix, Arizona. |
| Nov 18, 2025 | ALJ Samuel Fox issues the final decision, ruling in favor of the Respondent (HOA). |
III. Short-Answer Practice Questions
- Who was the designated custodian of association records according to the Tonto Forest Estates Bylaws?
- Answer: The Secretary of the Board (specifically Kenneth Riley during the period in question).
- What was the primary reason the ALJ ruled against the Petitioner despite the Petitioner proving he sent multiple emails?
- Answer: A prior Cease and Desist letter had established a specific, reasonable protocol for communication (physical mail), which the Petitioner disregarded by using email.
- According to the Petitioner's mathematical analysis, what were the odds that all of his communication attempts (six emails and two voicemails) failed purely due to technical error?
- Answer: Approximately 1 in 62.5 billion.
- What specific record was the Petitioner seeking in his June 1, 2025, request?
- Answer: An unprivileged invoice from CAI LLC.
- Where is the Office of Administrative Hearings located?
- Answer: 1740 West Adams Street, Lower Level, Phoenix, Arizona 85007.
- How did the Respondent (HOA) justify the claim that technology is unreliable for legal notice?
- Answer: The HOA President cited his military background in satellite communications and "Information Systems Command," arguing that "gremlins" and technical blind spots can prevent delivery without generating bounce notifications.
- Does A.R.S. § 33-1805 explicitly require HOAs to accept record requests via email?
- Answer: No. The statute does not specify the medium; it requires only that records be made "reasonably available."
IV. Essay Prompts for Deeper Exploration
1. The Intersection of Bylaws and Operational Protocols
Prompt: The Petitioner argued that Bylaw 5.5 made the Secretary the "custodian of records," and therefore his emails to the Secretary were legally sufficient. The Respondent argued that document requests were delegated to the Community Manager. Analyze how the ALJ resolved this conflict. In your response, address whether an HOA’s internal delegation of tasks can override statutory or bylaw-defined roles.
2. Evaluating "Reasonability" in the Digital Age
Prompt: A.R.S. § 33-1805 hinges on the "reasonability" of access. The ALJ ruled that requiring record requests via physical mail is reasonable, even if email is the faster, modern standard. Construct an argument either supporting the ALJ’s focus on established procedural protocols or critiquing it as an "extra-statutory burden" that undermines the intent of transparency in HOA governance.
3. Procedural Evasion vs. Technical Failure
Prompt: The Petitioner alleged "bad faith" and "intentional evasion," citing a pattern of hostility and the fact that the Board Secretary later admitted to blocking the Petitioner's email. The Respondent argued "technical failure" and a lack of a "meeting of the minds." Evaluate the evidence provided regarding the Secretary's blocking of emails and determine how much weight this should have carried in the final decision.
V. Glossary of Important Terms
- Administrative Law Judge (ALJ): A judge who overrules or presides over trials and adjudicates disputes involving administrative agencies.
- A.R.S. § 33-1805: The specific Arizona statute governing the inspection of planned community (HOA) records.
- Bounce Notification: An automated electronic message informing the sender that their email was not delivered to the recipient.
- Cease and Desist (C&D): A formal letter or order demanding that a party stop a specific activity (in this case, email communication) and refrain from doing it in the future.
- Motion to Quash: A legal request to a court or tribunal to render a subpoena or other legal order invalid.
- Motion to Reconsider: A request for the judge to review a previous decision based on new evidence or perceived errors in the original ruling.
- Petitioner: The party who initiates the legal action or petition (The Krahn Living Trust).
- Prevailing Party: The party in a lawsuit or hearing that wins the case.
- Respondent: The party against whom a petition is filed (Tonto Forest Estates HOA).
- Summary Judgment: A legal decision made by a court without a full trial, usually when there is no dispute as to the material facts of the case.
- Tribunal: A court of justice or an administrative body with the authority to adjudicate disputes.
Digital vs. Direct: The High-Stakes Battle Over HOA Record Requests
1. Introduction: The 10-Day Clock and the Digital Divide
In the regulatory landscape of Arizona homeowners associations, transparency is governed by a strict statutory timeline. At the center of Case No. 25F-H076-REL lies A.R.S. § 33-1805, which mandates that association records be made "reasonably available" within 10 business days of a written request.
This case highlights the growing friction between homeowners seeking digital transparency and boards insisting on formal communication protocols. The dispute involves the John R. Krahn Living Trust (Petitioner) and the Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association (Respondent). The core legal trigger was a June 2025 request for a specific invoice from "CAI LLC," which evolved into a high-stakes debate over whether an HOA can legally restrict record requests to physical mail when a "challenged relationship" exists between the parties.
2. The Petitioner’s Case: Math, "Gremlins," and the Mailbox Rule
Beginning June 1, 2025, Petitioner John Krahn attempted to secure an invoice through what he termed a "Redundancy Strategy." To overcome any potential technical failures, Krahn executed six independent communication attempts:
- Four Emails: Sent to three separate, known addresses for the Board Secretary—a "verify concrete" work email, a "GCTA" work email, and a personal Gmail address.
- Two Voicemails: Left for both the Board Secretary and the community manager.
Krahn presented a "Mathematical Certainty" argument, asserting that based on industry failure rates, the probability of all six communications failing to reach their recipients was 1 in 62.5 billion. He further invoked the "Mailbox Rule" via Lee v. State, arguing that proof of transmission to a correct address creates a rebuttable presumption of receipt.
The Petitioner's most compelling evidence—though it ultimately did not sway the legal outcome regarding the request process—was a "smoking gun" admission in Petitioner’s Exhibit 6. In an October 13, 2025, email, Board Secretary Tim Riley admitted that Krahn was "blocked from sending emails" to his work address. Riley further acknowledged that since Krahn’s previous emails did not "bounce," it was clear that Riley had seen them. Krahn argued this proved the HOA was acting in bad faith by denying receipt of the June requests while actively obstructing his digital access.
3. The HOA’s Defense: The "Technology Gap" and the Cease-and-Desist
Respondent’s President, Dwight Jolivette, offered a defense that combined technical skepticism with administrative "Best Practices." Paradoxically, Jolivette is a ten-year Army veteran who served with the Information Systems Command at the NSA, specializing in satellite communications. Despite his background as a technology expert, Jolivette testified that digital transmission is fundamentally unreliable, governed by "ones and zeros" that can fall into "blind spots."
Jolivette attributed the alleged non-receipt of the emails to "Gremlins" in the system, arguing that the Board could not be held liable for failing to fulfill a request they never saw. Beyond the technical defense, the HOA argued that routing document requests through individual Board members—even if the Bylaw 5.5 names the Secretary as the "custodian" of records—is a poor administrative practice. Jolivette maintained that requests should be routed through the community manager to ensure oversight and continuity, particularly when Board members travel for work.
4. The Turning Point: The March 2025 Cease-and-Desist Letter
The HOA's defense rested heavily on a Cease-and-Desist letter issued to Krahn on March 21, 2025. Following a period of high-volume communication and a "challenged relationship," the HOA attempted to "close the loop" on communication. The "close the loop" concept refers to the HOA’s demand for a delivery method that provides inherent confirmation (such as physical mail or certified delivery) rather than the "open loop" of standard email, which can be subject to silent failures or blocking.
The letter contained a specific directive:
"Going forward, any concerns or correspondence must be submitted in written form and mailed to the Association’s management office…"
The HOA argued that this letter established a "prescribed manner" for all future correspondence, effectively revoking the Petitioner's privilege to use email for official record requests.
5. The ALJ Decision: Why "Reasonable Process" Won the Day
On November 18, 2025, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Samuel Fox dismissed the petition. The ruling did not focus on whether the emails were actually received (rendering the "1 in 62 billion" math moot), but rather on whether the HOA’s established process was "reasonable."
The ALJ applied a two-pronged "Reasonability" test based on A.R.S. § 33-1805:
- Did the HOA make the ability to request documents reasonably available?
- Were the documents themselves reasonably available?
The Judge concluded that while the statute requires records to be made available, it is silent on the method of request. Crucially, the ALJ found that the statute does not prohibit an association from setting a specific process, nor does it require a board to accept email. Because the parties had a "challenged relationship" (finding of fact #8), the Judge ruled that the HOA’s requirement for physical mail was a "reasonable" administrative safeguard. By disregarding this prescribed process and continuing to use email, the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof.
6. Key Takeaways for Homeowners and HOAs
This case provides a roadmap for navigating the tension between statutory rights and board-established protocols.
- Established Processes Supersede Bylaw Roles: While Bylaw 5.5 designated the Secretary as the "custodian," the Board’s March 2025 directive established a formal process for delivery. In Arizona, a board’s reasonable administrative directive on how to submit a request can override the informal custodial roles defined in bylaws.
- The Limits of Digital Proof: Even with a "1 in 62 billion" probability and evidence of blocked emails, a requester cannot ignore a prescribed non-digital channel. If an association identifies a specific person and manner for requests, the burden of compliance rests on the member.
- The High Cost of "Litigating to the Max": The hearing highlighted the devastating financial consequences of persistent litigation within small communities. Constant legal battles in this 52-member HOA contributed to a 750% increase in insurance premiums and a 50-fold increase in the insurance deductible.
- The Value of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR): The ALJ’s ruling underscores the importance of exhausting "free ADR" and mediation. Entering a tribunal with a "litigate to the max" strategy often results in binary win/loss outcomes that do nothing to repair the underlying "challenged relationship" or the community's financial stability.
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
- John R. Krahn (Petitioner Representative)
John R Krahn Living Trust / Janet Krahn Living Trust
Respondent Side
- Dwight A. Jolivette (Respondent Representative)
Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association
President of the Board of Directors - Kenneth Riley (Secretary)
Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association
Secretary of the Board of Directors - Barbara Bonilla (Community Manager)
Tonto Forest Estates Homeowners Association
Neutral Parties
- Samuel Fox (Administrative Law Judge)
Office of Administrative Hearings - Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
Arizona Department of Real Estate