Arizona HOA vs. Anonymous Critics | Maricopa County Superior Court CV2025-036877
Trilogy at Power Ranch v. John Doe: An HOA’s Anonymous-Critic Suit Dies on Service
An HOA sued 50 anonymous ‘John Doe’ email critics, got leave to take discovery to identify them, but never completed service. The court dismissed the case without prejudice.
Last updated June 22, 2026. Case: Trilogy at Power Ranch Community Association v. John Doe #1-50, Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2025-036877 (Hon. Michael J. Herrod).
Scope note: This page covers a Maricopa County Superior Court trial-court matter (CV2025-036877) that was dismissed without prejudice for lack of service — the court never reached the merits. The complaint contained allegations against unidentified defendants; none were proven. This page is educational and is not legal advice.
The rule in one sentence
An association cannot keep an injunction case alive against unidentified ‘John Doe’ defendants it never serves; without personal service inside the court’s deadline, the case is dismissed.
Case snapshot
Trilogy at Power Ranch Community Association v. John Doe #1-50.
Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2025-036877 (Hon. Michael J. Herrod).
Dismissed without prejudice on March 4, 2026 for failure to serve the defendants within the court-ordered deadline.
Companion case filed the same day; the association’s identified-defendant claims continued in CV2025-036771 (Berman), which was itself later dismissed and settled.
Case Dossier
This generated dossier mirrors the structured data surfaced on the OAH/ADRE case pages. It is added from the curated court-case record and the custom page source package, while the hand-authored analysis below remains intact.
Case Summary
| Case ID / citation | CV2025-036877 |
|---|---|
| Court / tribunal | Superior Court |
| Decision / key date | March 4, 2026 |
| Judge / panel | Hon. Michael J. Herrod |
| Parties | The companion suit Trilogy at Power Ranch filed the same day, targeting 50 unidentified ‘John Doe’ senders of the anonymous ‘Trilogy News’ emails and seeking to declare the emails unlawful and enjoin them. |
| Governing law |
|
| Topics | board-governancefree-speechprocedure |
| Outcome / holding | An association cannot keep an injunction case alive against unidentified ‘John Doe’ defendants it never serves; absent personal service within the court-ordered deadline, the case is dismissed without prejudice. |
| Primary public source | View source opinion/order |
Parties, Court, and Research Coverage
| Uploaded source package | 3 PDFs |
|---|---|
| Step-by-step docket roadmap | 3 roadmap entries |
| Video overview | Trilogy at Power Ranch v. John Doe: Suing Anonymous HOA Critics |
| Study / briefing material | 0 sections |
| FAQ / homeowner questions | 0 questions |
| Curated download aliases | 3 download links |
Key Issues & Findings
Filed the same day as CV2025-036771, this companion case targeted 50 anonymous ‘John Doe’ defendants behind the ‘Trilogy News’ email campaign, again pleading tortious interference, injurious falsehood, and (as to one sender) hostile housing harassment. The court granted the association leave to take discovery to identify the senders and set a service deadline, but the association never completed personal service. Judge Michael Herrod vacated the order-to-show-cause hearing on November 14, 2025 and dismissed the case without prejudice on March 4, 2026 for failure to serve. The court never reached the merits.
Recognizing the defendants were anonymous, the court granted limited discovery to identify them and set a deadline for service. The association did not effect personal service within that window, and email service on anonymous accounts was inadequate. Under the civil rules governing failure to serve, the court dismissed the case without prejudice rather than reaching whether the emails were actually wrongful.
The case shows how hard it is for an association to weaponize the courts against anonymous online criticism: identification, personal jurisdiction, and service are real procedural hurdles that frequently end a case before any judge evaluates whether the speech crossed a legal line. ‘Without prejudice’ means the claims were not decided on the merits, but as a practical matter the anonymous-critic suit ended here while the identified-defendant case (CV2025-036771) was itself later dismissed and settled.
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
- Trilogy at Power Ranch Community Association (Plaintiff)
Association party that sued unidentified John Doe defendants. - Scott B. Carpenter (Counsel)
Carpenter Law Firm
Counsel for Trilogy at Power Ranch Community Association. - Keegan Klein (Counsel)
Carpenter Law Firm
Counsel for Trilogy at Power Ranch Community Association.
Respondent Side
- John Doe #1-50 (Defendants) (Defendants)
Unidentified anonymous defendants named in the complaint.
Neutral Parties
- Michael J. Herrod (Judge)
Superior Court judge who dismissed the John Doe case without prejudice.
Why this case matters
On the same day in October 2025, Trilogy at Power Ranch filed two suits over the anonymous ‘Trilogy News’ email campaign criticizing its board, staff, and committees. This one, CV2025-036877, targeted 50 unnamed ‘John Doe’ defendants and asked the court to declare the emails unlawful and enjoin them. The association alleged tortious interference, injurious falsehood, and (as to one sender) hostile housing harassment under the Fair Housing Act.
The problem was procedural and basic: you cannot sue people you cannot identify and serve. The court granted the association leave to take discovery to unmask the senders and set a service deadline, but the association never completed personal service. Judge Michael Herrod vacated the show-cause hearing in November 2025 and dismissed the case without prejudice in March 2026.
For homeowners, the case illustrates how hard it is for an association to weaponize the courts against anonymous online criticism. Identification, jurisdiction, and service are real hurdles that often end a case before any judge weighs whether the speech was actually wrongful.
Video overview: suing anonymous HOA critics
Watch this overview of Trilogy at Power Ranch v. John Doe #1-50, the companion HOA suit against anonymous ‘Trilogy News’ email critics that was dismissed without prejudice when the association never completed service.
What the court decided
The court let the association take limited discovery to try to identify the anonymous senders.
The association did not personally serve the defendants within the court-ordered window, and email service on anonymous accounts was inadequate.
Under the civil rules, Judge Herrod dismissed the case for lack of service; ‘without prejudice’ means it could in theory be refiled.
Filing roadmap and PDF downloads
Complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief against John Doe #1-50.
Filed by: Association
The association sued 50 unidentified email senders.
Order vacating the order-to-show-cause hearing; leave to take discovery to identify defendants.
Filed by: Superior Court
With no one served, the court called off the injunction hearing and allowed discovery to find the senders.
Order dismissing the case without prejudice for lack of service.
Filed by: Superior Court
Because no defendant was served by the deadline, Judge Herrod dismissed the case.
Complete uploaded source-document index
This index is generated from every public-facing source file currently present in assets/court_case_downloads/trilogy-at-power-ranch-v-john-doe-cv2025-036877/raw/: 3 PDFs. Files are ordered by the date/sequence embedded in the normalized filename; AI-generated review materials are labeled separately and should not be treated as court filings.
Complaint
Type: Opening pleading
Starts or reframes the case and identifies the claims or relief requested.
Order Vacating Show Cause Hearing
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Order Of Dismissal Without Prejudice
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.