Arizona HOA Case Explainer
A Sedona CC&R dispute became the vehicle for striking down Arizona’s first administrative process for HOA disputes — and reshaping where those disputes are heard.
Arizona Court of Appeals | 225 Ariz. 515, 241 P.3d 512 (App. 2010) | Decided 2010-10-28
Scope note: This educational page summarizes Gelb v. Department of Fire, Building & Life Safety, a Arizona Court of Appeals HOA-related authority. It is not legal advice.
Source note: The page keeps the public source URL but does not provide a local ruling PDF because no source PDF passed the file gate.
Carpenter Hazlewood represented the homeowner in the administrative-hearing dispute that produced this separation-of-powers ruling.
The takeaway
The statutory administrative-hearing process in A.R.S. sections 41-2198 to -2198.05 — which empowered the Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety to adjudicate disputes between homeowners and planned-community/condominium associations — violates the separation-of-powers provision of Article 3 of the Arizona Constitution. The court vacated the superior court’s judgment and directed the DFBLS to dismiss Gelb’s complaint without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction.
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
- Chris Gelb (Appellant)
Homeowner in the Sedona Casa Contenta planned community; plaintiff/appellant who invoked the administrative process against her HOA. - Frederick M. “Fritz” Aspey (Counsel)
Aspey, Watkins & Diesel, P.L.L.C.
Counsel for plaintiff/appellant Chris Gelb. - Carson T.H. Emmons (Counsel)
Aspey, Watkins & Diesel, P.L.L.C.
Counsel for plaintiff/appellant Chris Gelb. - Diana J. Elston (Counsel)
Aspey, Watkins & Diesel, P.L.L.C.
Counsel for plaintiff/appellant Chris Gelb.
Respondent Side
- Sedona Casa Contenta Homeowners Association, Inc. (Appellee)
Arizona non-profit homeowners’ association; defendant/appellee that raised the separation-of-powers challenge to the administrative process. - Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety (Appellee)
State agency; nominal defendant/appellee that took no position on constitutionality and had discontinued processing such claims in January 2009. - Camila Alarcon (Counsel)
Arizona Attorney General’s Office
Assistant Attorney General (office of Terry Goddard) for defendant/appellee DFBLS. - Jason E. Smith (Counsel)
Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Wood, PLC
Counsel for defendant/appellee HOA. Carpenter Hazlewood (predecessor to CHDB Law) served as HOA counsel in this case. - Mark K. Sahl (Counsel)
Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Wood, PLC
Counsel for defendant/appellee HOA (Carpenter Hazlewood). - Carrie H. Smith (Counsel)
Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Wood, PLC
Counsel for defendant/appellee HOA (Carpenter Hazlewood).
Neutral Parties
- Samuel A. Thumma (Judge)
Authored the opinion; then a Superior Court judge designated to sit on the Court of Appeals under Ariz. Const. art. 6, sec. 3. - Lawrence F. Winthrop (Judge)
Presiding Judge; concurred. - Patrick Irvine (Judge)
Judge; concurred.
What happened
Chris Gelb began building a home in 2005 in a Sedona subdivision governed by the Sedona Casa Contenta Homeowners Association. As with many planned communities, her property was subject to the community’s covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs), and the relationship between owner and association was governed by those documents and Arizona’s planned-community statutes in A.R.S. Title 33.
In 2007, after a dispute arose over Gelb’s landscaping, the HOA placed crushed rock in the common area in front of Gelb’s home without her permission. Gelb viewed the HOA’s conduct as a violation of the CC&Rs, setting up the underlying disagreement between the homeowner and her association.
Rather than file suit in court, Gelb used the administrative option the Legislature had created in 2006. Under A.R.S. sections 41-2198 to -2198.05, a homeowner or association could petition the Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety, which after reviewing the petition and response could refer the matter to the Office of Administrative Hearings for a hearing before an administrative law judge. Gelb filed her petition with the DFBLS in 2008, alleging the HOA had violated the CC&Rs, and the matter was referred to the OAH.
Following a hearing later in 2008, the ALJ issued a decision finding the HOA had not violated the CC&Rs. Under the statute, the ALJ’s decision was final and not subject to review or rehearing by the DFBLS; the only avenue of relief was review in the superior court. Gelb then filed a complaint in superior court seeking review of the ALJ’s decision.
In the superior court, the HOA moved to dismiss, arguing that the entire Administrative Process was unconstitutional because it violated the separation-of-powers provision of Article 3 of the Arizona Constitution. The superior court summarily denied that motion and, after further briefing and oral argument, found the ALJ’s decision was supported by the substantial weight of the evidence and denied Gelb relief. Gelb timely appealed.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals declined to decide the CC&R merits Gelb had raised. It found the constitutional issue was properly before it (rejecting Gelb’s cross-appeal and waiver arguments) and that the appeal could not fairly be decided on nonconstitutional grounds. Applying the four-factor Cactus Wren / J.W. Hancock test, the court held that assigning the DFBLS authority to adjudicate planned-community disputes, with no regulatory nexus or expertise, violated separation of powers.
The court vacated the superior court’s judgment and directed the DFBLS to dismiss Gelb’s complaint without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction, leaving the parties free to pursue their CC&R dispute in court. The court noted the DFBLS had itself stopped processing such claims in January 2009 after other courts reached the same conclusion, and it emphasized that the Legislature remained free to grant a properly connected agency such authority in the future.
For Arizona homeowners and associations, Gelb v. DFBLS is a structural decision about where HOA disputes may be decided, not about who was right in any particular CC&R fight. By holding that the 2006 administrative-hearing process violated separation of powers, the court removed the inexpensive administrative forum homeowners and associations had used since 2006 and, at least temporarily, pushed CC&R and community-document disputes back into the courts. The court was careful to say the Legislature could constitutionally create such a forum, but only if it tied the adjudicating agency to a genuine regulatory framework for community associations, which it had not done for the DFBLS. The practical fallout is the reason the case still matters. The Legislature responded by revising Arizona’s HOA dispute-resolution scheme so that petitions are filed with, and hearings conducted by, the Office of Administrative Hearings, the neutral adjudicative body the constitutional analysis pointed toward. Anyone researching the current A.R.S. section 41-2198 framework should understand that today’s process exists in the shape it does partly because of Gelb, and that the case is a leading Arizona authority on the limits of delegating judicial-type power to executive agencies. This summary is educational and neutral; it is not legal advice, and homeowners or associations facing a dispute should confirm the current statutes and consult a qualified Arizona attorney.
Counsel note: Carpenter Hazlewood represented the homeowner, Chris Gelb, in the administrative dispute that led to this constitutional ruling.
Litigation record
Chris Gelb begins building a home in a Sedona subdivision governed by the Sedona Casa Contenta Homeowners Association.
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
Arizona Legislature enacts the administrative dispute-resolution process for homeowner/association disputes (A.R.S. sections 41-2198 to -2198.05).
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
After a landscaping dispute, the HOA places crushed rock in the common area in front of Gelb’s home without her permission.
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
Gelb files a petition with the DFBLS alleging the HOA violated the CC&Rs; the matter is referred to the Office of Administrative Hearings.
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
Following a hearing, the ALJ finds the HOA did not violate the CC&Rs; Gelb files a complaint in superior court for review.
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
The DFBLS discontinues processing claims under the Administrative Process after other courts find it unconstitutional.
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
Court of Appeals holds the Administrative Process unconstitutional under Article 3, vacates the superior court judgment, and directs dismissal without prejudice.
Filed by: Court record
Part of the record summarized for homeowners, boards, and counsel.
FAQ
What was Gelb v. Department of Fire, Building & Life Safety about?
Homeowner Chris Gelb had a dispute with her HOA, the Sedona Casa Contenta Homeowners Association, over the community’s CC&Rs after the HOA placed crushed rock in the common area in front of her home. Instead of deciding who was right on the CC&Rs, the Court of Appeals addressed whether the state’s administrative-hearing process for HOA disputes was constitutional, and held that it was not.
What did the court actually decide?
The court held that the administrative process in A.R.S. sections 41-2198 to -2198.05, which let the Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety (DFBLS) route homeowner-versus-association disputes to an administrative law judge, violated the separation-of-powers guarantee in Article 3 of the Arizona Constitution. It vacated the superior court’s judgment and directed the DFBLS to dismiss Gelb’s complaint without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction.
Why did the process violate separation of powers?
Using the four-factor Cactus Wren and J.W. Hancock test, the court found that adjudicating a private CC&R dispute is judicial in nature and that the DFBLS had no regulatory authority over, or special expertise in, planned communities. Because the agency’s adjudication was not tied to any legitimate regulatory purpose, it improperly encroached on the courts, even though superior-court review provided a partial check.
Does this mean HOA disputes can no longer be heard administratively in Arizona?
Not permanently. The court expressly said the Legislature could grant a properly connected agency authority to hear these disputes. In response to decisions like Gelb, the Legislature revised the framework so that HOA dispute petitions are handled through the Office of Administrative Hearings. Anyone dealing with a current dispute should check the present version of the statutes.
Who represented the parties, and was Carpenter Hazlewood involved?
Aspey, Watkins & Diesel represented homeowner Chris Gelb; the Arizona Attorney General’s Office represented the DFBLS; and Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Wood, PLC (a community-association firm, predecessor to CHDB Law) represented the Sedona Casa Contenta HOA, which raised the successful constitutional challenge.
Is Gelb v. DFBLS still good law, and is this legal advice?
Gelb is a published, precedential Arizona Court of Appeals decision and remains a leading authority on the limits of delegating judicial-type power to executive agencies. This page is a neutral educational summary, not legal advice; the statutory framework has since changed, so confirm the current law and consult a qualified Arizona attorney about any specific situation.
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 | 225 Ariz. 515, 241 P.3d 512 (App. 2010) |
|---|---|
| Court / tribunal | Court of Appeals |
| Decision / key date | October 28, 2010 |
| Judge / panel | Samuel A. Thumma (author; designated Superior Court judge), Lawrence F. Winthrop (Presiding Judge), Patrick Irvine (Judge) |
| Parties | Homeowner Chris Gelb challenged an ALJ ruling in her CC&R dispute with the Sedona Casa Contenta HOA; the Court of Appeals instead struck the DFBLS administrative-hearing process on separation-of-powers grounds. |
| Governing law | |
| Topics | cc-and-rscovenantsproceduremembership |
| Outcome / holding | The statutory administrative-hearing process in A.R.S. sections 41-2198 to -2198.05 — which empowered the Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety to adjudicate disputes between homeowners and planned-community/condominium associations — violates the separation-of-powers provision of Article 3 of the Arizona Constitution. The court vacated the superior court’s judgment and directed the DFBLS to dismiss Gelb’s complaint without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction. |
| Primary public source | View source opinion/order |
Parties, Court, and Research Coverage
| Uploaded source package | No raw source-folder files found for this slug |
|---|---|
| Step-by-step docket roadmap | 7 roadmap entries |
| Video overview | No video embed currently configured |
| Study / briefing material | 1 section |
| FAQ / homeowner questions | 6 questions |
| Curated download aliases | 0 download links |
Key Issues & Findings
Chris Gelb, a homeowner in the Sedona Casa Contenta planned community, fell into a dispute with her homeowners’ association over how the community’s covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs) applied to her property after the HOA placed crushed rock in the common area in front of her home. Rather than sue in court, Gelb used the administrative dispute-resolution process the Arizona Legislature created in 2006 (A.R.S. sections 41-2198 to -2198.05), under which the Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety (DFBLS) refers homeowner-versus-association disputes to an administrative law judge at the Office of Administrative Hearings. The ALJ found the HOA had not violated the CC&Rs, and the superior court, on administrative review, denied Gelb relief. On appeal, the Court of Appeals did not reach the merits of the CC&R dispute. Instead it took up a threshold constitutional question the HOA had raised: whether giving an executive-branch agency authority to adjudicate private disputes over community governing documents violates the separation-of-powers guarantee in Article 3 of the Arizona Constitution. Applying the four-factor test from Cactus Wren and J.W. Hancock, the court held that it does, because the DFBLS has no regulatory authority over, or special expertise in, planned communities, so its adjudication was an untethered exercise of judicial power that threatened the core functions of the courts. The court vacated the superior court’s judgment and directed the DFBLS to dismiss Gelb’s complaint without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction, leaving the parties to resolve their CC&R dispute in court. The decision helped prompt the Legislature to move HOA dispute hearings to the Office of Administrative Hearings in later legislation.
The court analyzed the Administrative Process under the four non-exclusive factors from Cactus Wren v. Arizona Department of Building & Fire Safety and J.W. Hancock Enterprises v. Arizona State Registrar of Contractors: (1) the essential nature of the power exercised; (2) the degree of control the agency exercises; (3) the Legislature’s objective in establishing the agency’s functions; and (4) the practical result of mingling roles. On factor one, adjudicating a dispute between two private parties over CC&Rs is judicial in nature. On factor two, the process did not coerce the judiciary because superior-court review supplies a critical judicial check, so that factor favored constitutionality. Factors three and four proved decisive: an agency may resolve private disputes only when that authority is auxiliary to and dependent upon a legitimate regulatory power. The DFBLS was created to oversee manufactured housing and fire safety and has no regulatory authority over planned communities, cannot review or modify an ALJ’s decision, and furnishes no special expertise. Unlike the mobile-home regulation upheld in Cactus Wren or the contractor-licensing discipline in J.W. Hancock, the DFBLS merely processed paperwork in an area with no nexus to its statutory purpose, threatening the core functions of the courts. Because the HOA overcame the strong presumption of constitutionality, the Administrative Process, as applied to planned communities, violated Article 3.
For Arizona homeowners and associations, Gelb v. DFBLS is a structural decision about where HOA disputes may be decided, not about who was right in any particular CC&R fight. By holding that the 2006 administrative-hearing process violated separation of powers, the court removed the inexpensive administrative forum homeowners and associations had used since 2006 and, at least temporarily, pushed CC&R and community-document disputes back into the courts. The court was careful to say the Legislature could constitutionally create such a forum, but only if it tied the adjudicating agency to a genuine regulatory framework for community associations, which it had not done for the DFBLS.
The practical fallout is the reason the case still matters. The Legislature responded by revising Arizona’s HOA dispute-resolution scheme so that petitions are filed with, and hearings conducted by, the Office of Administrative Hearings, the neutral adjudicative body the constitutional analysis pointed toward. Anyone researching the current A.R.S. section 41-2198 framework should understand that today’s process exists in the shape it does partly because of Gelb, and that the case is a leading Arizona authority on the limits of delegating judicial-type power to executive agencies. This summary is educational and neutral; it is not legal advice, and homeowners or associations facing a dispute should confirm the current statutes and consult a qualified Arizona attorney.