Sharon M. Maiden v. Val Vista Lakes Community Association

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H030-REL
Agency
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-06-02
Administrative Law Judge VMT
Outcome
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Sharon M. Maiden Counsel
Respondent Val Vista Lakes Community Association Counsel

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H030-REL Decision – 1272425.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1272426.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1282372.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1282375.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1284492.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1288176.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1288177.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1293820.pdf

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25F-H030-REL Decision – 1313134.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:38:47 (114.8 KB)

Administrative Hearing Briefing:Maiden v. Val Vista Lakes Community Association

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the administrative hearing case Sharon M. Maiden v. Val Vista Lakes Community Association (No. 25F-H030-REL), adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. The petitioner, Sharon Maiden, a former board member, alleged that the association selectively enforced its bylaws to disqualify her from running for the board and violated Arizona’s open meeting laws by making this decision in a closed executive session.

The central conflict revolved around the interpretation of a 2021 bylaw amendment that shortened board member term limits. The petitioner argued for a prospective application, which would reset the term-limit clock for sitting board members, while the respondent association argued for an interpretation that counted prior service.

On June 2, 2025, Administrative Law Judge Velva Moses-Thompson issued a decision denying the petition in its entirety. The judge concluded that the association’s board acted within the bounds of Arizona statute (A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)) by holding a closed session to consider legal advice. Furthermore, the judge found that the petitioner failed to prove a bylaw violation, reasoning that the association’s interpretation was consistent with the membership’s clear intent to shorten, not lengthen, the potential tenure of board members.

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Case Overview

Case Name

Sharon M. Maiden v. Val Vista Lakes Community Association

Case Number

25F-H030-REL

Tribunal

Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)

Petitioner

Sharon M. Maiden

Respondent

Val Vista Lakes Community Association

Respondent’s Counsel

Josh Bolen, Esq. (CHDB Law LLP)

Presiding Judge

Velva Moses-Thompson

Petition Allegations

The petition, filed by Sharon Maiden on December 15, 2024, asserted two primary violations by the Val Vista Lakes Community Association:

1. Selective Enforcement of Bylaws: An alleged violation of Article IV, Sections 2 and 3 of the Association’s Bylaws, stemming from the board’s decision to disqualify the petitioner from running for a board position in 2024 based on its interpretation of term limits.

2. Open Meeting Law Violation: An alleged violation of Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1804(A), contending that the board failed to hold an open meeting when it made the binding decision to disqualify her candidacy.

Initially filed as a single-issue petition for which a $500 fee was paid, the OAH ordered on March 12, 2025, that the petitioner must either pay an additional $500 to pursue both issues or select one to proceed with at the hearing.

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Procedural History

January 27, 2025: The Arizona Department of Real Estate refers the petition to the OAH for an administrative hearing.

February 4, 2025: Respondent files a Motion to Strike the Petition, arguing the petitioner improperly disclosed attorney-client privileged communications.

February 11, 2025: Administrative Law Judge Kay A. Abramsohn denies the Motion to Strike. The hearing is continued to March 26, 2025.

March 26, 2025: The first day of the evidentiary hearing is conducted.

April 11, 2025: A further hearing is conducted. At its conclusion, the record is held open to allow for post-hearing briefing.

May 13, 2025: The post-hearing briefing period concludes, and the record is closed.

June 2, 2025: The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) issues the final decision, denying the petition.

Central Dispute: Interpretation of Bylaw Term Limits

The core of the dispute was the interpretation of Article IV, Section 2 of the association’s bylaws, which was amended in 2021. The amendment’s purpose, as testified by multiple witnesses, was to shorten the length of time directors could serve on the board.

Evolution of the Bylaw

2012 Bylaws: Introduced term limits for the first time, establishing a maximum of three consecutive two-year terms (six years total), followed by a required one-year break.

2021 Bylaws: The membership approved a rewrite that reduced term limits to two consecutive elected two-year terms (four years total), followed by a required two-year break.

Both versions of the bylaw contained the following critical sentence: “Commencing with the first Annual Meeting after the adoption of these Amended and Restated Bylaws, Directors will be subject to term limits as follows.” The meaning of this sentence became the primary point of contention.

Competing Interpretations

Position

Argument Summary

Key Evidence and Testimony

Petitioner’s Position (Prospective Application)

The “Commencing with…” language resets the clock. Terms served before the 2021 amendment should not count toward the new, shorter limits. The association’s sudden shift to a retroactive interpretation was selective and targeted.

William Sutell (Former President): Testified the intent was to “reset the clock for everybody.” His 2022 newsletter stating his “term limit of four years is up” was “ineloquent” and meant to express he was tired of serving.
Douglas Keats (Former Board Member): Stated the intent of the rewrite was to “Go forward.”
Historical Precedent: The association, based on a 2016 legal opinion from Goodman Law Group, had allowed Director Cheryl McCoy to serve nine consecutive years despite the 2012 bylaw’s six-year limit.
Legal Opinions: An opinion from Krupnik & Speas in November 2023 stated the 2021 bylaws were prospective, not retroactive.

Respondent’s Position (Prior Service Counts)

The clear intent of the membership and the bylaw committee was to shorten terms. The petitioner’s interpretation creates a loophole allowing sitting board members to serve for 8 or more years, directly contradicting the amendment’s purpose.

Jill Brown (Bylaw Committee Chair): Testified the committee’s intent was to apply the new limits to sitting directors and there was no discussion of “grandfathering” anyone.
Bryan Patterson (Current President): Testified that the membership voted for two two-year terms “and that’s it.”
Sutell’s 2022 Newsletter: Presented as a direct admission from the former president that the four-year limit applied to him based on his service from 2018-2022.
Drafting Logic: The “Commencing with…” clause is a standard legal provision to prevent a new rule from invalidating a board member’s current term, not to erase their entire service history.

Central Dispute: Alleged Open Meeting Law Violation

The second major issue concerned the board’s decision-making process. On October 11, 2024, the board held a closed executive session where it voted 5-4 to accept the legal opinion of its counsel (CHDB Law) and disqualify Ms. Maiden from the ballot.

Competing Arguments

Position

Argument Summary

Key Evidence and Testimony

Petitioner’s Argument (Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1804(A))

The vote to disqualify a candidate was a final, binding decision that must be made in an open meeting. The closed session was not justified under the narrow exceptions of the statute.

Improper Notice: The meeting notice cited the incorrect statute (for condominiums, not planned communities) and was not properly distributed to all board members.
Lack of Statutory Justification: No attorney was present at the meeting, and there was no pending litigation at that specific moment. The agenda item was to “accept opinion,” not simply “receive advice.”

Respondent’s Argument (Compliance with Law)

The executive session was permissible under A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)(1), which allows closed meetings for the “consideration of… Legal advice from an attorney for the board or the association” and matters concerning “pending or contemplated litigation.”

Contemplated Litigation: Testimony indicated that Ms. Maiden had threatened to file an ADR complaint or lawsuit.
Consideration of Legal Advice: The board was reviewing three separate legal opinions regarding Ms. Maiden’s eligibility.
Petitioner’s Participation: Ms. Maiden was present at the meeting, participated in the vote, and did not object to the session being held in private at that time.

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Administrative Law Judge’s Decision and Rationale

The ALJ denied Ms. Maiden’s petition on both counts, finding that she failed to meet her burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence.

Ruling on the Open Meeting Law

The ALJ concluded that the board did not violate A.R.S. § 33-1804(A).

Key Rationale: The evidence demonstrated that the board met in executive session “to consider a legal opinion regarding the 2021 Amendment.” This action falls squarely within the statutory exception outlined in A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)(1).

On Disclosure: The statute permits, but does not require, the board to disclose information from such a session after a “final resolution.” As the matter was still being litigated, no final resolution had been reached.

Ruling on the Bylaw Violation

The ALJ concluded that the petitioner failed to establish that the respondent violated Article IV of its bylaws.

Key Rationale: The judge focused on the underlying purpose of the 2021 amendment, which testimony from both sides confirmed was to “prevent Board members from serving for long periods of time.”

Rejection of Petitioner’s Interpretation: The decision noted that the petitioner, along with her witnesses, admitted that their interpretation “would have allowed the then-sitting Board Members the right to serve 6, 8, and potentially 10-year term limits.” The ALJ found this outcome would be contrary to the amendment’s purpose.

Jurisdictional Note: The decision explicitly stated that the “issue of selective enforcement is not within the jurisdiction of the tribunal.” The ruling was based on the interpretation of the bylaw’s text and intent, not on whether it was applied unevenly.

Final Order

“IT IS ORDERED that Petitioners’ petition is denied because she has not established that Respondent’s Board violated A.R.S. § 33-1804 or Article IV, Sections 2 and 3 of the Bylaws.”

Administrative Hearing Study Guide: Maiden v. Val Vista Lakes Community Association

Short-Answer Quiz

Answer each of the following questions in 2-3 sentences, based on the provided source context.

1. What were the two primary legal issues Sharon Maiden raised in her petition against the Val Vista Lakes Community Association?

2. What was the key phrase in the 2021 bylaws that became the central point of interpretive conflict regarding term limits?

3. According to the hearing testimony, what were the main purposes of the 2021 bylaw committee’s rewrite of the association’s bylaws?

4. Explain the Respondent’s justification for holding a closed executive session on October 11, 2024, to decide on Sharon Maiden’s eligibility.

5. How did the legal opinions from the Goodman Law Group (Ashley Turner) and Krupnik & Spees (Adrien Speed) support the Petitioner’s case?

6. Describe the key piece of evidence the Respondent used involving former board president William (Bill) Sutell to argue against a prospective interpretation of the term limits.

7. What decision did the Board of Directors make during the October 11, 2024, executive session, and what was the final vote count?

8. What procedural issue did Petitioner Douglas Keats identify with the notice for the October 11, 2024, executive session?

9. According to witness Jill Brown, what was the general intent of the bylaw committee and community members regarding the length of board service?

10. What were the final conclusions of the Administrative Law Judge in the June 2, 2025, decision?

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Answer Key

1. Petitioner Sharon Maiden alleged that the Respondent (1) selectively enforced the Bylaws in violation of Article IV, Sections 2 and 3, and (2) failed to hold an open meeting when it decided to disqualify her from running for the Board, in violation of Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1804(A).

2. The central point of conflict was the phrase in Article IV, Section 2: “Commencing with the first Annual Meeting after the adoption of these Amended and Restated Bylaws, Directors will be subject to term limits…” The Petitioner argued this indicated a prospective “reset,” while the Respondent argued it did not erase prior service.

3. Testimony from witnesses like Douglas Keats and William Sutell indicated the rewrite was intended to address multiple issues, not just term limits. Key purposes included establishing secret ballots, eliminating the nominating committee which was seen as counter to the CCNRs, and creating a formal procedure for replacing board members based on vote counts rather than board appointments.

4. The Respondent justified the closed session under A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)(1), which allows for closed meetings to consider legal advice from an attorney. The board was discussing three separate legal opinions regarding Ms. Maiden’s eligibility and also noted that Ms. Maiden had contemplated legal action against the association.

5. The Petitioner argued that these opinions demonstrated a consistent historical interpretation by the association’s own general counsels. Both opinions stated that the term limit language in the 2012 and 2021 bylaws should be interpreted prospectively, meaning terms served prior to the adoption of the new bylaws did not count toward the new limits.

6. The Respondent heavily relied on a November 2022 newsletter message from then-president Bill Sutell. In it, Mr. Sutell stated, “This will be my last president’s message to the community as my term limit of four years is up,” which the Respondent argued was an admission that the term limits were not reset by the 2021 bylaw amendment.

7. The Board of Directors voted to accept the opinion of CHDB Law LLP regarding term limits, which effectively disqualified Sharon Maiden from running in the 2024 election. The motion passed with a vote of 5 to 4.

8. Douglas Keats testified that the email notice for the executive session was not sent to him or two other board members (Christine Rucker and Curtis Weile) at their correct addresses, while it was sent to a former board member. He also noted the notice cited an incorrect statute (A.R.S. § 33-1248 for condominiums) instead of the one for planned communities.

9. Jill Brown, who chaired the bylaw committee, testified that the general consensus of the committee and community members was that they did not want directors serving for long periods. The intent was to shorten the available terms to encourage turnover and prevent directors from serving for “excessive amounts of time.”

10. The Administrative Law Judge denied Sharon Maiden’s petition. The Judge concluded that the Respondent did not violate A.R.S. § 33-1804(A) because the closed meeting to consider legal advice was permissible. Furthermore, the Judge found Maiden failed to prove a violation of the bylaws, stating the purpose of the 2021 amendment was to prevent long service periods, and deemed the issue of selective enforcement to be outside the tribunal’s jurisdiction.

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Essay Questions

Construct detailed responses to the following prompts, synthesizing evidence and arguments from across the source documents. Do not provide answers.

1. Analyze the legal arguments presented by both the Petitioner and Respondent regarding the proper interpretation of A.R.S. § 33-1804 (Arizona’s open meeting law). Discuss the specific actions taken by the board and how each party framed those actions in the context of the statute’s exceptions for closed sessions.

2. Compare and contrast the testimonies of William Sutell and Douglas Keats with that of Jill Brown. How did their recollections and interpretations of the bylaw committee’s intent differ, particularly concerning whether the new term limits should apply prospectively or retroactively to sitting board members?

3. Trace the evolution of the Val Vista Lakes Community Association’s bylaws regarding term limits from 2012 to 2021. Evaluate the arguments concerning “long-standing practice” and “selective enforcement,” referencing the specific cases of board members Cheryl McCoy, William Sutell, and Sharon Maiden.

4. Examine the role of conflicting legal advice in this dispute. Discuss the different opinions offered by the Goodman Law Group, Krupnik & Spees, and CHDB Law LLP, and analyze how the Board of Directors chose to navigate these contradictory recommendations.

5. The Administrative Law Judge’s final decision states that the “issue of selective enforcement is not within the jurisdiction of the tribunal.” Based on the testimony and arguments presented, construct an argument that Sharon Maiden might have made regarding selective enforcement, and explain why the Respondent would have refuted it.

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Glossary of Key Terms and Entities

Term / Entity

Definition

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)

An independent judge who presides over administrative hearings. In this case, Kay A. Abramsohn and Velva Moses-Thompson served as ALJs.

Arizona Department of Real Estate (Department)

The state agency authorized to receive and decide on petitions from members of homeowners’ associations. It referred this case to the OAH.

Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.)

The codified laws of the state of Arizona. Key statutes in this case include § 33-1804(A) and § 32-2199.

A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)

The Arizona statute concerning open meeting laws for planned community associations. It mandates that meetings be open to members but provides specific, limited exceptions for closed (executive) sessions, such as to discuss legal advice.

Bolen, Josh

An attorney with CHDB Law LLP who served as counsel for the Respondent, Val Vista Lakes Community Association.

Brown, Jill

A witness for the Respondent. She served as the chair of the 2021 bylaw committee and was a current board member at the time of the hearing.

Bylaw Committee

A committee established by the board in 2021 to review and recommend changes to the association’s bylaws. Its members included Jill Brown, William Sutell, and Douglas Keats.

Carpenter Hazelwood (CHDB LAW LLP)

The law firm that represented the Respondent. The Petitioner filed an unsuccessful motion to disqualify the firm.

Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions. The governing documents for the community. The 2021 bylaw committee sought to address bylaw provisions that were counter to the CCNRs, such as the nominating committee.

Commencing with…

The key phrase in Article IV, Section 2 of the bylaws that was central to the dispute. The Petitioner argued it signaled a prospective application of term limits, while the Respondent disagreed.

Executive Session

A closed meeting of the Board of Directors, permitted under A.R.S. § 33-1804(A) for specific purposes, such as discussing legal advice or pending litigation.

Keats, Douglas

A witness for the Petitioner. He was a former board member who served as secretary of the 2021 bylaw committee.

Maiden, Sharon M.

The Petitioner in the case, a homeowner in Val Vista Lakes and a former member of its Board of Directors who was disqualified from running for a third consecutive term.

Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH / Tribunal)

The independent state agency that conducted the administrative hearing for this case after referral from the Department of Real Estate.

Patterson, Bryan

A witness for the Respondent. He was the HOA President at the time of the hearing and was Vice President when the vote to disqualify the Petitioner occurred.

Petitioner

The party who files a petition initiating a legal action. In this case, Sharon M. Maiden.

Preponderance of the Evidence

The standard of proof in this administrative hearing, defined as evidence that is more likely true than not. The ALJ found the Petitioner failed to meet this burden.

Prospective Interpretation

The argument that a new rule or law applies only “going forward” from its effective date and does not consider service or actions that occurred prior to that date. This was the Petitioner’s central argument.

Respondent

The party against whom a petition is filed. In this case, Val Vista Lakes Community Association.

Retroactive Interpretation

The argument that a new rule or law applies to past events, meaning prior service on the board would count against the newly established term limits. This was the Respondent’s position.

Sutell, William (Bill)

A witness for the Petitioner. He is an attorney, a former board president, and served on the 2021 bylaw committee.

Val Vista Lakes Community Association

The Respondent in the case; a homeowners’ association (HOA) in Gilbert, Arizona.

5 Surprising Lessons from an HOA War Over a Single Sentence

Introduction: The Butterfly Effect of Bylaws

For many homeowners, the rules set by their homeowners’ association (HOA) can feel arbitrary, buried in dense legal documents. But the precise wording of those governing documents has massive, unforeseen consequences—a legal butterfly effect where a minor change creates a major storm. This dynamic was on full display in the case of Sharon Maiden vs. Val Vista Lakes Community Association, where one seemingly simple sentence sparked a complex, year-long legal dispute.

The case offers a masterclass in the tension between the technical reading of a text versus its clear, underlying intent. It provides surprising insights into law, community governance, and human nature. Here are five key lessons from this HOA war over a single sentence.

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1. One Sentence, Two Meanings, and a Mountain of Legal Bills

A 2021 bylaw amendment, designed to reduce board member term limits, lit the fuse for the central conflict. The entire dispute hinged on the interpretation of one introductory phrase, demonstrating just how much can ride on a few words.

The critical sentence from Article IV, Section 2 of the 2021 Bylaws reads:

“Commencing with the first Annual Meeting after the adoption of these Amended and Restated Bylaws, Directors will be subject to term limits as follows.”

This single sentence gave rise to two completely opposite interpretations:

The “Reset” Theory (Petitioner’s view): Proponents argued this language meant the term limit clock reset for all sitting board members. Under this view, their prior years of service didn’t count toward the new, shorter limit. This interpretation seemed solid, even supported by a formal legal opinion from the association’s previous general counsel, attorney Adrien Spees.

The “Look-Back” Theory (Respondent’s view): The association argued the phrase was merely a legal formality to prevent sitting members from being disqualified mid-term. They contended that a board member’s prior service absolutely still counted toward the new limit.

The fact that this ambiguity was enough to fuel a formal administrative hearing shows the high stakes of precise legal drafting. What’s truly surprising is how a standard legal phrase like “Commencing with…” could be interpreted so diametrically as to potentially erase years of board service from the term-limit calculation.

2. The Architect of the Rule Became Its Most Complicated Case

One of the most fascinating aspects of the case involved the testimony of Bill Sutell, the former Board President. Mr. Sutell was in charge when the 2021 bylaw changes were drafted and approved, and he testified in support of the “reset” theory, which would have allowed him and other members to serve longer.

However, the strongest piece of evidence used against his position came from his own hand. In a 2022 newsletter to the community, Mr. Sutell had written:

“This will be my last president’s message to the community as my term limit of four years is up.”

When questioned, he explained the statement was “ineloquent.” He testified he was tired and had a “self-imposed term limit” because he “didn’t want to be a career board member.” This created a paradox where the rule’s architect argued for one interpretation in court while his own public statement seemed to support the opposing view. As community governance analysts, we see a crucial lesson here: for HOA volunteers, informal communications like a newsletter can be scrutinized with the same intensity as a legal document—a trap many well-meaning leaders are unprepared for.

3. Why a “Correct” Interpretation Can Still Be Wrong

The petitioner’s side came to the hearing with what seemed like very strong evidence. They had testimony about the bylaw committee’s intent and presented a formal legal opinion from attorney Adrien Spees that appeared to settle the matter:

“This amendment is prospective not retroactive. The Term limits only apply to directors elected beginning the first annual meeting following November 9th, 2021. Thus, a director who has served for several years before November 9th, 2021 will still be eligible to serve two consecutive terms after November 9th, 2021.”

This seems clear-cut. However, the argument that ultimately won focused not on what the words said, but on what they would do. The fatal blow to the “reset” theory came not from the respondent’s lawyers, but from the petitioner’s own key witnesses. During testimony, both Sutell and another witness, Douglas Keats, admitted that their interpretation would create a massive loophole, allowing sitting board members “the right to serve 6, 8, and potentially 10-year term limits.” This admission was critical. The Administrative Law Judge rejected an interpretation—even one supported by a legal opinion—because it led to an “absurd result” that directly contradicted the stated purpose of the rule, which was to shorten term limits, not accidentally lengthen them for a select few.

4. The Peril of a Closed-Door Meeting

The second major issue was the claim that the board violated Arizona’s open meeting laws. The vote to disqualify Sharon Maiden from the 2024 ballot was not taken in public. Instead, it happened during a closed executive session while she, a sitting board member, was present.

The board justified the closed-door meeting by stating they were discussing legal advice and contemplated litigation, a valid exception under A.R.S. § 33-1804. However, the ALJ’s final decision highlighted a crucial detail:

“Petitioner was a member of the Board at the time of the meeting and did not object to the Board voting on whether Article IV, Section 2 of Respondent’s Bylaws permitted Petitioner to run for the board…”

This offers a stark lesson. A person’s failure to object to a process in the moment can significantly weaken their ability to challenge it later. It’s easy to see why someone might stay silent: they may be intimidated, unsure of the rules, or simply not realize the procedural gravity of their silence. This surprising takeaway underscores that understanding the rules of order as they are happening is critical, because silence can be interpreted as consent.

5. The “Why” Trumped the “What”

The story concluded when the Administrative Law Judge denied the petitioner’s case on both counts. In the face of ambiguous text and competing legal opinions, the judge focused on the fundamental purpose of the 2021 bylaw amendment. The final decision stated:

“…the preponderance of the evidence presented at hearing shows that the purpose of the 2021 amendment was to prevent Board members for serving on the Board for long periods of time.”

In this legal gray area, the underlying intent—the “why” behind the rule—proved more powerful than the technical arguments about the “what.” The judge determined that an interpretation creating 10-year term limits could not possibly align with the members’ vote to prevent people from serving for long periods. The surprising lesson is that even when the text is debatable, the spirit of a rule can become the most decisive factor in its application.

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Conclusion: Are You Sure You Know What Your Rules Mean?

The Val Vista Lakes case is a powerful reminder that the words in bylaws are not just suggestions; they have real-world power to shape communities, define rights, and launch costly legal battles. Bylaws are “living documents” in the sense that they have a daily impact, but they are dangerously “dead documents” if members don’t understand them. The consequences are not just financial. At the hearing, former president Bill Sutell gave a poignant final statement explaining his departure from the community he had worked so hard to serve: “I sold my home that this was more than I needed in my retirement.”

This case is a cautionary tale about the human cost of ambiguity. It leaves every HOA member with a final, thought-provoking challenge: When was the last time you read your community’s governing documents, and are you willing to actively question ambiguity and push for clarity before a conflict arises?

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Sharon M. Maiden (Petitioner)
    Val Vista Lakes Community Association
    Self-represented petitioner and homeowner
  • William Sutell (Witness)
    Val Vista Lakes Community Association
    Former board president who testified on behalf of the petitioner
  • Douglas Keats (Witness)
    Val Vista Lakes Community Association
    Former board member who testified on behalf of the petitioner

Respondent Side

  • Josh Bolen (Counsel)
    CHDB Law LLP
    Attorney representing the respondent
  • Jill Brown (Witness)
    Val Vista Lakes Community Association
    Current board member who testified on behalf of the respondent
  • Bryan Patterson (Witness)
    Val Vista Lakes Community Association
    Current board president who testified on behalf of the respondent

Neutral Parties

  • Velva Moses-Thompson (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presiding judge who issued the final decision
  • Kay A. Abramsohn (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Signed a pre-hearing order
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Received copies of the orders and decisions

Anne F. Segal vs Prince Court Homeowners Association, INC.

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H032-REL
Agency Arizona Department of Real Estate
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-05-22
Administrative Law Judge JC
Outcome Petition Denied
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Anne F. Segal Counsel Pro Se
Respondent Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc. Counsel Wendy Ehrlich, Esq.

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H032-REL Decision – 1269718.pdf

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25F-H032-REL Decision – 1269742.pdf

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25F-H032-REL Decision – 1274756.pdf

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25F-H032-REL Decision – 1274775.pdf

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25F-H032-REL Decision – 1277633.pdf

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25F-H032-REL Decision – 1288621.pdf

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25F-H032-REL Decision – 1308520.pdf

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Briefing Document: Segal vs. Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc.

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the proceedings and outcome of the administrative case Anne F. Segal, Petitioner, vs. Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc., Respondent (No. 25F-H032-REL), adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. The core of the dispute centered on the petitioner’s allegation that the respondent HOA utilized unlawful procedures to replace the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).

The petitioner argued that the HOA violated state statutes and the original governing documents by failing to hold sufficient open meetings for discussion, by not providing a proper ballot for a vote, and by circumventing a one-year discussion period intended by the original developer. Key evidence presented by the petitioner included testimony from the community’s original developer, who affirmed his intent for a lengthy, homeowner-driven amendment process, and testimony detailing significant, substantive changes to the CC&Rs that were allegedly not transparently communicated.

The respondent HOA defended its actions by asserting full compliance with Arizona law, particularly A.R.S. § 33-1817, which permits amendments via written consent of a majority of homeowners—a process legally distinct from a formal vote. The HOA maintained that state law superseded any conflicting provisions in the original CC&Rs. The board justified its decision to forgo a large, open-forum meeting by citing perceived “aggressive and threatening” communications from the petitioner, opting instead for a process of email-based “straw polls,” a formal Q&A period with its attorney, and a notarization event for collecting written consent.

Ultimately, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) denied the petition. The final decision concluded that the petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof. The ALJ found that the HOA acted lawfully by using executive sessions to obtain legal advice, by amending the CC&Rs through the statutory process of written consent, and that other statutes cited by the petitioner were inapplicable to the case.

Case Overview

The matter involves a formal petition filed on December 22, 2024, by homeowner Anne F. Segal with the Arizona Department of Real Estate. The petition alleged that the Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc. violated multiple Arizona Revised Statutes (§§ 33-1812, 33-1803(B-E), 33-1804, 33-1817) and its own governing documents (initially cited as Article V, later amended to Article VII) during the process of replacing the community’s CC&Rs.

The case was referred to the Office of Administrative Hearings, with evidentiary hearings held on March 27, 2025, and May 2, 2025, before Administrative Law Judge Jenna Clark. A final decision denying the petition was issued on May 22, 2025.

Key Parties and Witnesses

Name / Entity

Key Contributions

Anne F. Segal

Petitioner, Homeowner

Argued the HOA’s process was unlawful, lacked transparency, and violated open meeting laws and voting rights. Provided testimony and evidence regarding communications and the substance of the CC&R changes.

Prince Court Homeowners Association

Respondent

Defended its amendment process as compliant with state statutes for written consent and justified its communication methods based on legal advice and the petitioner’s conduct.

Mary Beth Snyder

President, HOA Board

Testified on behalf of the HOA (also called as an adverse witness by Petitioner). Detailed the board’s decision-making process, reliance on legal counsel, and rationale for avoiding an open-forum meeting.

Susan Matheson

Vice President, HOA Board

Corroborated Snyder’s testimony. Testified to managing the HOA’s email communications, including the accidental removal of David Zinfeld from the distribution list. Detailed complaints received from other homeowners about the petitioner’s communications.

David Zinfeld

Witness for Petitioner; Original Developer of Prince Court

Testified that he wrote the original CC&Rs with the intent for a year-long, homeowner-led discussion before any amendments. Stated he stopped receiving HOA communications and was not involved in or properly notified of the replacement process.

Dr. Robert Segal

Witness for Petitioner; Husband of Petitioner and Property Manager

Testified to the lack of open meetings and poor communication. Described the proposed CC&R changes as a “heart transplant” and highlighted discrepancies between the board’s “summary of changes” and the actual legal text.

Wendy Ehrlich, Esq.

Counsel for Respondent

Provided legal advice to the HOA board, which formed the basis for their procedural decisions. Argued the case for the Respondent during the hearings.

Jenna Clark

Administrative Law Judge

Presided over the hearings and issued the final decision, concluding the HOA acted lawfully and denying the petition.

——————————————————————————–

Central Arguments and Evidence

Petitioner’s Core Allegations

The petitioner’s case was built on the premise that the HOA’s procedure for replacing the CC&Rs was fundamentally flawed and unlawful.

Violation of Governing Documents (Article VII): The petitioner argued the HOA ignored the original CC&Rs, which, according to the original developer David Zinfeld, intended a one-year period of open discussion prior to any amendment. Zinfeld testified, “I wanted it to be done at least a year beforehand…with discussion and meetings before any amendments should take place.”

Improper Amendment Process: The petitioner contended that the “notarized agreement” process was not a valid “vote” and violated A.R.S. § 33-1812. This process did not provide a formal ballot or an opportunity for homeowners to vote “for or against” the action, effectively silencing dissent.

Violation of Open Meeting Laws (A.R.S. § 33-1804): The petitioner alleged a lack of genuine open meetings where the substance of the new CC&Rs could be debated. Testimony indicated that discussions about the CC&Rs primarily occurred in closed executive sessions, justified by the board as necessary for receiving legal advice.

Inadequate and Misleading Communication: Dr. Robert Segal described the summary of changes provided by the board as misleading and incomplete. He gave specific examples, such as a new rule allowing the board to remove any “objectionable” vehicle, which was not mentioned in the summary provided to homeowners. The petitioner also argued that relying solely on an incomplete and unverified email list was an unreasonable means of notice.

Substantive Overhaul Without Consent: Dr. Segal characterized the changes as a “heart transplant,” not a minor revision. He noted the new CC&Rs gave the board “much more power and authority,” including the ability to raise fees by 20% per year.

Respondent’s Defense

The respondent HOA maintained that its actions were deliberate, based on legal counsel, and fully compliant with Arizona law.

Adherence to Statutory Process (A.R.S. § 33-1817): The HOA’s central defense was that A.R.S. § 33-1817 allows for CC&R amendments through either an “affirmative vote or written consent.” They argued they lawfully chose the written consent path, which does not require a formal ballot under A.R.S. § 33-1812. Their counsel stated, “Article 7 dictated written consent. There was no vote conducted.”

State Law Supersedes Governing Documents: The HOA argued, and noted in its October 14, 2024 email to members, that “The time limitations for CC&R amendments set forth in our current CC&Rs, Article VII… have been superseded by Arizona law which allows CC&Rs to be amended at any time; see A.R.S. § 33-1817.”

Justification for Avoiding an Open Forum: Both Mary Beth Snyder and Susan Matheson testified that the decision not to hold a large, in-person informational meeting was based on legal advice and the board’s concern that the petitioner would “hijack the meeting” due to her perceived “aggressive and threatening” emails and communications. Matheson read excerpts from petitioner’s emails, including phrases like “This unilateral decision of the board is buying a lawsuit” and “I’m willing to legally challenge this effort.”

Reasonable Communication Efforts: The board defended its use of email as a reasonable means of notice. They testified to sending eight separate email communications regarding the CC&Rs, including “straw polls” to gauge opinion, drafts of the new CC&Rs, and a formal Q&A where the board’s attorney answered submitted questions.

——————————————————————————–

Final Adjudication: Administrative Law Judge Decision

On May 22, 2025, Judge Jenna Clark issued a decision denying the petition in its entirety, finding that the petitioner had not sustained her burden of proof.

Findings of Fact

The decision outlined a timeline of events from the initial announcement in March 2024 to the notarization event in December 2024. Key findings included:

• The board hired counsel in April 2024 to assist with updating the CC&Rs.

• The association conducted “straw poll” emails in July and August 2024.

• The board held closed executive sessions to discuss legal advice from its attorney regarding the CC&R revisions.

• A draft of the proposed CC&Rs was distributed to members via email on October 14, 2024.

• A Q&A process was conducted, with attorney-provided answers distributed on November 25, 2025.

• The association intentionally did not hold a large open meeting due to concerns over the petitioner’s perceived behavior.

• A majority of homeowners (at least 20 of 39) provided signed and notarized consent agreements.

Conclusions of Law

The ALJ made the following legal conclusions, which formed the basis of the denial:

1. Written Consent is a Lawful Process: The Tribunal found that A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1) explicitly allows an association to amend its declaration by “an affirmative vote or written consent.” The HOA lawfully chose the written consent method.

2. State Law Supersedes CC&Rs: The provisions of A.R.S. § 33-1817 supersede the edicts outlined in Article VII of the original CC&Rs regarding the amendment timeline.

3. Executive Sessions Were Permissible: The board was permitted under A.R.S. § 33-1804(A) to go into executive session to receive legal advice from its attorney, even if the advice was unrelated to pending litigation.

4. Inapplicability of Other Statutes: The statutes regarding voting procedures (A.R.S. § 33-1812) and violation notices (A.R.S. § 33-1803) were deemed inapplicable and irrelevant to the matter at hand, as no formal vote was conducted and no violation notice was issued to the petitioner.

5. Failure to Meet Burden of Proof: The decision concluded that the petitioner failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the respondent had violated any of the cited statutes or its governing documents. The petition was therefore denied.

Questions

Question

Can an HOA amend its CC&Rs by obtaining written consent from homeowners rather than holding a vote?

Short Answer

Yes, an HOA is permitted to amend CC&Rs by written consent under A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1), and voting statutes do not apply to this process.

Detailed Answer

The Administrative Law Judge ruled that the association was permitted to modify its CC&Rs by written consent of its members. Because this process falls under A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1), the statutes governing voting (A.R.S. § 33-1812) are considered unrelated and irrelevant to the proceedings.

Alj Quote

It is clear from the record that the Association … was also permitted to modify or otherwise amend its CC&Rs by written consent of its Members under ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1817(A)(1)… Notably, ARIZ. REV. STAT. §§ 33-1812(A) and 33-1803 are inapplicable to the proceedings at bar as unrelated and irrelevant.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)

Topic Tags

  • CC&R Amendments
  • Written Consent
  • Voting Rights

Question

Does state law override CC&R provisions that restrict when amendments can be made (e.g., only every 10 years)?

Short Answer

Yes, A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1) supersedes original CC&R restrictions regarding periodic renewal or specific timelines for amendments.

Detailed Answer

The decision clarifies that state statute supersedes 'edicts' in original CC&Rs regarding timing for amendments. Even if the original documents specify a renewal period, the association can amend the documents via the statutory written consent process.

Alj Quote

…permitted to modify or otherwise amend its CC&Rs by written consent of its Members under ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1817(A)(1); which supersedes any edicts outlined in Article VII of the original CC&Rs.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)

Topic Tags

  • CC&R Amendments
  • State Statute Supremacy
  • Governing Documents

Question

Can the HOA Board hold a closed executive session to get legal advice if there is no pending lawsuit?

Short Answer

Yes, the Board may meet in executive session to receive legal advice from their attorney, even if it is unrelated to pending litigation.

Detailed Answer

Homeowners often believe legal advice must relate to a lawsuit for a meeting to be closed. However, the ALJ ruled that the Board is permitted to go into executive session to receive legal advice unrelated to pending litigation under A.R.S. § 33-1804(A).

Alj Quote

It is clear from the record that the Association was not only permitted to go into executive session to receive legal advice unrelated to pending litigation from its attorney under ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1804(A)…

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)

Topic Tags

  • Open Meetings
  • Executive Session
  • Legal Advice

Question

Is the HOA required to hold an open discussion or town hall meeting before amending the CC&Rs?

Short Answer

No, the tribunal found that there is no requirement to permit members to openly deliberate proposed changes for a specific period if the statutory process is followed.

Detailed Answer

The petitioner argued that the HOA was required to permit open deliberation for at least one year. The ALJ disagreed, ruling that the petitioner did not sustain the burden of proof for this contention, implying statutory compliance for written consent is sufficient.

Alj Quote

Specifically, Petitioner contends that Respondent was required to permit Members to openly deliberate proposed changes to the CC&Rs for at least 1 year… the Tribunal is not in agreement with either of Petitioner’s contentions, and holds that she has not sustained her burden of proof in this matter.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1817

Topic Tags

  • Procedural Requirements
  • Open Discussion
  • CC&R Amendments

Question

Do statutes regarding monetary penalties apply to the process of amending CC&Rs?

Short Answer

No, statutes regarding fines and penalties are irrelevant to the amendment process if no actual violation notice was issued or penalty imposed.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ dismissed allegations regarding A.R.S. § 33-1803 (which governs monetary penalties) because they were inapplicable to a dispute centered on the procedural validity of amending CC&Rs where no fines were levied.

Alj Quote

Notably, ARIZ. REV. STAT. §§ 33-1812(A) and 33-1803 are inapplicable to the proceedings at bar as unrelated and irrelevant. No violations of these statutes have been established by a preponderance of the evidence.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1803

Topic Tags

  • Penalties
  • Statutory Application
  • Relevance

Question

Who bears the burden of proof in a hearing regarding HOA procedural violations?

Short Answer

The petitioner (homeowner) bears the burden of proving the violation by a preponderance of the evidence.

Detailed Answer

In administrative hearings regarding HOA disputes, it is up to the homeowner filing the petition to prove that their allegations are more probably true than not.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent committed the alleged statutory and/or governing document violation(s).

Legal Basis

Administrative Procedure

Topic Tags

  • Burden of Proof
  • Legal Procedure

Case

Docket No
25F-H032-REL
Case Title
Anne F. Segal v. Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc.
Decision Date
2025-05-22
Alj Name
Jenna Clark
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

Can an HOA amend its CC&Rs by obtaining written consent from homeowners rather than holding a vote?

Short Answer

Yes, an HOA is permitted to amend CC&Rs by written consent under A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1), and voting statutes do not apply to this process.

Detailed Answer

The Administrative Law Judge ruled that the association was permitted to modify its CC&Rs by written consent of its members. Because this process falls under A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1), the statutes governing voting (A.R.S. § 33-1812) are considered unrelated and irrelevant to the proceedings.

Alj Quote

It is clear from the record that the Association … was also permitted to modify or otherwise amend its CC&Rs by written consent of its Members under ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1817(A)(1)… Notably, ARIZ. REV. STAT. §§ 33-1812(A) and 33-1803 are inapplicable to the proceedings at bar as unrelated and irrelevant.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)

Topic Tags

  • CC&R Amendments
  • Written Consent
  • Voting Rights

Question

Does state law override CC&R provisions that restrict when amendments can be made (e.g., only every 10 years)?

Short Answer

Yes, A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1) supersedes original CC&R restrictions regarding periodic renewal or specific timelines for amendments.

Detailed Answer

The decision clarifies that state statute supersedes 'edicts' in original CC&Rs regarding timing for amendments. Even if the original documents specify a renewal period, the association can amend the documents via the statutory written consent process.

Alj Quote

…permitted to modify or otherwise amend its CC&Rs by written consent of its Members under ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1817(A)(1); which supersedes any edicts outlined in Article VII of the original CC&Rs.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)

Topic Tags

  • CC&R Amendments
  • State Statute Supremacy
  • Governing Documents

Question

Can the HOA Board hold a closed executive session to get legal advice if there is no pending lawsuit?

Short Answer

Yes, the Board may meet in executive session to receive legal advice from their attorney, even if it is unrelated to pending litigation.

Detailed Answer

Homeowners often believe legal advice must relate to a lawsuit for a meeting to be closed. However, the ALJ ruled that the Board is permitted to go into executive session to receive legal advice unrelated to pending litigation under A.R.S. § 33-1804(A).

Alj Quote

It is clear from the record that the Association was not only permitted to go into executive session to receive legal advice unrelated to pending litigation from its attorney under ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1804(A)…

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)

Topic Tags

  • Open Meetings
  • Executive Session
  • Legal Advice

Question

Is the HOA required to hold an open discussion or town hall meeting before amending the CC&Rs?

Short Answer

No, the tribunal found that there is no requirement to permit members to openly deliberate proposed changes for a specific period if the statutory process is followed.

Detailed Answer

The petitioner argued that the HOA was required to permit open deliberation for at least one year. The ALJ disagreed, ruling that the petitioner did not sustain the burden of proof for this contention, implying statutory compliance for written consent is sufficient.

Alj Quote

Specifically, Petitioner contends that Respondent was required to permit Members to openly deliberate proposed changes to the CC&Rs for at least 1 year… the Tribunal is not in agreement with either of Petitioner’s contentions, and holds that she has not sustained her burden of proof in this matter.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1817

Topic Tags

  • Procedural Requirements
  • Open Discussion
  • CC&R Amendments

Question

Do statutes regarding monetary penalties apply to the process of amending CC&Rs?

Short Answer

No, statutes regarding fines and penalties are irrelevant to the amendment process if no actual violation notice was issued or penalty imposed.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ dismissed allegations regarding A.R.S. § 33-1803 (which governs monetary penalties) because they were inapplicable to a dispute centered on the procedural validity of amending CC&Rs where no fines were levied.

Alj Quote

Notably, ARIZ. REV. STAT. §§ 33-1812(A) and 33-1803 are inapplicable to the proceedings at bar as unrelated and irrelevant. No violations of these statutes have been established by a preponderance of the evidence.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1803

Topic Tags

  • Penalties
  • Statutory Application
  • Relevance

Question

Who bears the burden of proof in a hearing regarding HOA procedural violations?

Short Answer

The petitioner (homeowner) bears the burden of proving the violation by a preponderance of the evidence.

Detailed Answer

In administrative hearings regarding HOA disputes, it is up to the homeowner filing the petition to prove that their allegations are more probably true than not.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent committed the alleged statutory and/or governing document violation(s).

Legal Basis

Administrative Procedure

Topic Tags

  • Burden of Proof
  • Legal Procedure

Case

Docket No
25F-H032-REL
Case Title
Anne F. Segal v. Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc.
Decision Date
2025-05-22
Alj Name
Jenna Clark
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Anne F. Segal (Petitioner)
    Appeared on her own behalf
  • Robert Segal (Witness)
    Husband of Petitioner
  • David Zeinfeld (Witness)
    Original developer of the subdivision

Respondent Side

  • Wendy Ehrlich (Counsel)
    Counsel for Respondent
  • Mary Beth Snyder (Witness)
    Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc.
    Board President
  • Susan Matheson (Witness)
    Prince Court Homeowners Association, Inc.
    Board Vice President

Neutral Parties

  • Jenna Clark (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presiding ALJ
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
  • Dianna Tidle (Observer)

Tatum Highlands Community Association, INC. vs Matthew P. Petrovic

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H019-REL
Agency Arizona Department of Real Estate
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-12-26
Administrative Law Judge VMT
Outcome complete
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Tatum Highlands Community Association, Inc. Counsel Danny M. Ford, Esq. (Goodman Law Group)
Respondent Matthew P. Petrovic Counsel Pro Se

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1327903.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:31 (2245.4 KB)

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1344402.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:35 (57.4 KB)

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1353469.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:39 (73.9 KB)

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1353471.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:43 (9.4 KB)

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1364458.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:46 (59.3 KB)

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1381249.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:49 (233.9 KB)

25F-H019-REL Decision – 1301437.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:52 (137.3 KB)

Briefing Document: Tatum Highlands Community Association, INC vs. Matthew Petrovic

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the key events, arguments, and rulings in the administrative dispute between homeowner Matthew Petrovic (Respondent) and the Tatum Highlands Community Association, INC (Petitioner), case number 25F-H019. Following an initial Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) decision on May 5, 2025, that found the Petitioner to be the prevailing party, the Respondent successfully petitioned for a rehearing.

The Respondent’s request for a rehearing was based on several grounds, including the misinterpretation of evidence regarding landscaping (Sago palms), insufficient evidence for a paint violation, and the arbitrary denial of a medically necessary walkway. Critically, Mr. Petrovic also cited significant procedural failures, alleging he was denied due process because he was misinformed about the nature of the original hearing and was thus unprepared and without legal counsel. He further claimed that the Petitioner’s witness provided false testimony and that key evidence was improperly excluded.

The Petitioner objected to the rehearing request, arguing solely that it was filed five days past the statutory 30-day deadline. Despite this objection, the Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate granted the rehearing. The official order cites two specific grounds for granting the request: “Error in the admission or rejection of evidence or other errors of law occurring during the proceeding,” and “That the findings of fact or decision is arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.” A subsequent continuance has moved the new hearing to October 22, 2025.

Case Overview and Procedural History

The case involves a dispute between a homeowner and his HOA that was initially adjudicated by the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH). The homeowner, Matthew Petrovic, appealed the initial decision to the Arizona Department of Real Estate (ADRE) Commissioner and was granted a new hearing.

Key Parties and Representatives:

Name/Entity

Affiliation

Petitioner

Tatum Highlands Community Association, INC

Attorney for Petitioner

Danny M. Ford, Esq.

Goodman Law Group

Respondent

Matthew P. Petrovic

Original ALJ

Velva Moses–Thompson

Office of Administrative Hearings

Deputy Commissioner

Mandy Neat

Arizona Department of Real Estate

ALJ for Continuance

Nicole Robinson

Office of Administrative Hearings

Timeline of Events:

Description

April 15, 2025

Original Hearing

The initial hearing on the dispute takes place.

May 5, 2025

Initial ALJ Decision

ALJ Velva Moses–Thompson issues a decision deeming the Petitioner the “prevailing party.” The decision includes a notice of a 30-day deadline to request a rehearing.

June 9, 2025

Rehearing Request Filed

Respondent Matthew Petrovic files a Dispute Rehearing Request with the ADRE Commissioner.

June 17, 2025

Objection to Rehearing

The Petitioner files a timely response, objecting to the rehearing request on the grounds that it was filed five days past the deadline.

July 3, 2025

Rehearing Granted

The ADRE Deputy Commissioner issues an “Order Granting Rehearing Request.”

July 23, 2025

Notice of Hearing Issued

A notice for the new hearing is issued (as referenced in a later document).

August 28, 2025

Continuance Granted

At the Respondent’s request, ALJ Nicole Robinson grants a continuance for the hearing.

October 22, 2025 (1:00 PM)

Scheduled Rehearing

The new, continued date for the rehearing is set.

Respondent’s Grounds for Rehearing Petition

Matthew Petrovic submitted a detailed petition outlining four primary areas of concern: the factual basis for the violations, procedural irregularities, false testimony, and a lack of due process.

1. Landscape Violation – Sago Palms

Mr. Petrovic argues the ruling that Sago palms are prohibited was incorrect and contradicted the evidence he presented.

Evidence Submitted: He claims to have provided copies of the CC&Rs, documentation from the Arizona Municipal Water Users Association (AMWUA) classifying Sago palms as drought-tolerant plants and not true palm trees, and supporting witness testimony.

Allegation of False Testimony: He asserts that the petitioner’s witness, identified as “Kevin,” gave false testimony under oath by stating the plants were not allowed, despite being presented with contrary evidence.

New Evidence: Since the hearing, Mr. Petrovic states he has directly contacted AMWUA, which confirmed Sago palms are not in the palm family. He also notes that a current board member is willing to testify that the plants are permitted under the HOA’s governing documents.

2. Paint Condition Dispute

The petition contends that the ruling on his home’s paint being “in disrepair” was not supported by credible evidence.

Conflicting Testimony: Three witnesses, including Mr. Petrovic, testified that the paint is in good condition. The individual who testified against the paint’s condition is reportedly no longer a sitting board member.

Prior Approval and Inconsistent Reasoning: The exterior paint was reviewed and approved by the HOA board when he purchased the home. He alleges the board has demonstrated “inconsistent reasoning” by first claiming the violation was due to the paint needing to be two colors and later changing the reason to “disrepair.”

Lack of Evidence from Petitioner: The petition states the board has not submitted objective proof, such as photographs or condition reports, to support its claim. Mr. Petrovic views these actions as potential “selective enforcement and retaliation” for his opposition to prior board actions.

3. Paver Walkway Denial

Mr. Petrovic claims the HOA has engaged in selective enforcement and bad faith by repeatedly denying his application for a modified walkway over the past three years.

Medical Necessity: The walkway modifications are supported by a physician’s letter referencing chronic back and shoulder conditions.

Selective Enforcement: Similar walkways have allegedly been approved for other homeowners, yet his requests have been denied without justification.

Violation of CC&Rs: He argues the denial violates the community’s CC&Rs, which require the board to act reasonably and impartially, and that the denial could be viewed as discrimination.

4. Procedural and Due Process Concerns

A significant portion of the petition focuses on procedural failures that Mr. Petrovic believes deprived him of a fair hearing.

Exclusion of Evidence: He states that key evidence relevant to his claim of selective enforcement was excluded from the hearing due to concerns about third-party privacy.

Misunderstanding of Hearing Nature: Mr. Petrovic was “led to believe the meeting was a mediation session” and was unaware that binding decisions could result.

Inability to Prepare Defense: Due to this misunderstanding and “financial hardship,” he was unable to retain legal counsel or properly prepare his case, which he argues “constitutes a denial of due process.”

Petitioner’s Objection to Rehearing

The Tatum Highlands Community Association, through its attorney Danny M. Ford of Goodman Law Group, filed an objection based on a single procedural argument.

Untimely Filing: The Petitioner’s core argument is that the request for rehearing was time-barred.

◦ The decision was served on May 5, 2025.

◦ The 30-day statutory deadline, per A.R.S. § 41-1092.09, was June 4, 2025.

◦ Mr. Petrovic filed his request on June 9, 2025, five days late.

Notice of Deadline: The objection notes that the deadline was “plainly written on the very Decision” and that being unrepresented is not an excuse for missing it.

Requested Action: The Petitioner respectfully requested that the ALJ deny and dismiss the rehearing request as untimely.

Official Rulings and Current Status

Order Granting Rehearing Request

On July 3, 2025, Deputy Commissioner Mandy Neat of the Arizona Department of Real Estate issued an order granting Mr. Petrovic’s request. The order implicitly overruled the Petitioner’s objection regarding the filing deadline. The Commissioner cited two of the grounds available for granting a rehearing, which directly align with the arguments made in Mr. Petrovic’s petition:

1. Error in the admission or rejection of evidence or other errors of law occurring during the proceeding.

2. That the findings of fact or decision is arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.

Order Granting Continuance and Current Status

An order dated August 28, 2025, from Administrative Law Judge Nicole Robinson shows that the rehearing was continued at the request of the Respondent, Matthew Petrovic.

The rehearing is officially scheduled to take place on October 22, 2025, at 1:00 PM.

Questions

Question

Who has the burden of proof in an HOA violation hearing?

Short Answer

The Petitioner (usually the HOA initiating the case) bears the burden of proof.

Detailed Answer

In an administrative hearing regarding HOA disputes, the party filing the petition (the Petitioner) must prove that the other party violated the governing documents by a preponderance of the evidence.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated the aforementioned CC&Rs and Design Guidelines.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal standards
  • procedure

Question

What is the standard of proof used in these hearings?

Short Answer

Preponderance of the evidence.

Detailed Answer

The standard is 'preponderance of the evidence,' which means the existence of a contested fact is more probable than not.

Alj Quote

A preponderance of the evidence means 'proof which leads the [trier of fact] to find that the existence of the contested fact is more probable than its nonexistence.'

Legal Basis

In re William L., 211 Ariz. 236, 238 (App. 2005)

Topic Tags

  • legal standards
  • evidence

Question

Can I install a driveway extension without prior HOA approval if neighbors have similar ones?

Short Answer

No. You must seek approval first.

Detailed Answer

Even if neighbors have similar features, failing to seek Architectural Review Committee (ARC) approval prior to installation constitutes a violation of the CC&Rs. The presence of other potentially non-compliant homes does not excuse the failure to follow the approval process.

Alj Quote

Regardless, the record has established that Respondent did not seek ARC approval prior to installing the paver driveway extension. … As such, Petitioner has established that Respondent violated CC&R, Section 4.2.1.

Legal Basis

CC&R Section 4.2.1

Topic Tags

  • architectural control
  • driveways
  • selective enforcement

Question

What happens if I plant trees that the Architectural Committee specifically denied?

Short Answer

It is a violation of the governing documents.

Detailed Answer

Proceeding to install landscaping that was explicitly denied by the Architectural Review Committee establishes a clear violation of the community's restrictions.

Alj Quote

In regard to the pigmy palm tree matter, the evidence clearly established that Respondent requested to plant two pigmy palm trees in his front yard, was denied by ARC, and planted them anyway. … Hence, Petitioner has established that Respondent violated CC&R Section 4.2.7.

Legal Basis

CC&R Section 4.2.7 / Design Guidelines

Topic Tags

  • landscaping
  • architectural control
  • violations

Question

Can the Administrative Law Judge rule on Fair Housing Act discrimination claims?

Short Answer

No, that venue cannot address Fair Housing Act claims.

Detailed Answer

The Office of Administrative Hearings for the Department of Real Estate does not have jurisdiction to address claims regarding violations of the Fair Housing Act in these proceedings.

Alj Quote

In addition, Respondent’s claims regarding the Association violating the Fair Housing Act cannot be addressed in this venue.

Legal Basis

Jurisdiction limits

Topic Tags

  • jurisdiction
  • discrimination
  • Fair Housing Act

Question

Can the HOA fine me for 'disrepair' of paint if the paint is just old but not damaged?

Short Answer

Not necessarily, if evidence shows it is not in disrepair.

Detailed Answer

If witness testimony establishes that the paint is not actually in disrepair, fines based on that allegation may be waived, even if the homeowner needs to eventually repaint to meet new color schemes.

Alj Quote

Also, the evidence established from firsthand witnesses that Respondent’s paint was not in disrepair. Therefore, Respondent should be given the opportunity to move forward with the ARC approval for painting his home and any fines he received in regards to the paint be waived.

Legal Basis

CC&R Section 4.2.7

Topic Tags

  • maintenance
  • paint
  • fines

Question

Do I have to reimburse the HOA's filing fees if I lose the hearing?

Short Answer

Yes, typically for the issues on which the HOA prevails.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ may order the Respondent to reimburse the Petitioner's filing fees. In this case, the Respondent was ordered to pay fees proportional to the two issues the HOA won.

Alj Quote

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Respondent reimburse Petitioner’s filing fee of $1,000.00 in certified funds for the two issues.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01

Topic Tags

  • penalties
  • fees

Question

Does the HOA have to waive fines if a violation was not proven?

Short Answer

Yes.

Detailed Answer

If the HOA fails to prove a specific violation (e.g., that paint was in disrepair), the ALJ may order the Association to waive fines related to that specific issue.

Alj Quote

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Petitioner waive all fines issued to Respondent in regards to the paint issue.

Legal Basis

Administrative Order

Topic Tags

  • fines
  • penalties

Case

Docket No
25F-H019-REL-RHG
Case Title
Tatum Highlands Community Association, Inc. v. Matthew P. Petrovic
Decision Date
2025-12-26
Alj Name
Nicole Robinson
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

Who has the burden of proof in an HOA violation hearing?

Short Answer

The Petitioner (usually the HOA initiating the case) bears the burden of proof.

Detailed Answer

In an administrative hearing regarding HOA disputes, the party filing the petition (the Petitioner) must prove that the other party violated the governing documents by a preponderance of the evidence.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated the aforementioned CC&Rs and Design Guidelines.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal standards
  • procedure

Question

What is the standard of proof used in these hearings?

Short Answer

Preponderance of the evidence.

Detailed Answer

The standard is 'preponderance of the evidence,' which means the existence of a contested fact is more probable than not.

Alj Quote

A preponderance of the evidence means 'proof which leads the [trier of fact] to find that the existence of the contested fact is more probable than its nonexistence.'

Legal Basis

In re William L., 211 Ariz. 236, 238 (App. 2005)

Topic Tags

  • legal standards
  • evidence

Question

Can I install a driveway extension without prior HOA approval if neighbors have similar ones?

Short Answer

No. You must seek approval first.

Detailed Answer

Even if neighbors have similar features, failing to seek Architectural Review Committee (ARC) approval prior to installation constitutes a violation of the CC&Rs. The presence of other potentially non-compliant homes does not excuse the failure to follow the approval process.

Alj Quote

Regardless, the record has established that Respondent did not seek ARC approval prior to installing the paver driveway extension. … As such, Petitioner has established that Respondent violated CC&R, Section 4.2.1.

Legal Basis

CC&R Section 4.2.1

Topic Tags

  • architectural control
  • driveways
  • selective enforcement

Question

What happens if I plant trees that the Architectural Committee specifically denied?

Short Answer

It is a violation of the governing documents.

Detailed Answer

Proceeding to install landscaping that was explicitly denied by the Architectural Review Committee establishes a clear violation of the community's restrictions.

Alj Quote

In regard to the pigmy palm tree matter, the evidence clearly established that Respondent requested to plant two pigmy palm trees in his front yard, was denied by ARC, and planted them anyway. … Hence, Petitioner has established that Respondent violated CC&R Section 4.2.7.

Legal Basis

CC&R Section 4.2.7 / Design Guidelines

Topic Tags

  • landscaping
  • architectural control
  • violations

Question

Can the Administrative Law Judge rule on Fair Housing Act discrimination claims?

Short Answer

No, that venue cannot address Fair Housing Act claims.

Detailed Answer

The Office of Administrative Hearings for the Department of Real Estate does not have jurisdiction to address claims regarding violations of the Fair Housing Act in these proceedings.

Alj Quote

In addition, Respondent’s claims regarding the Association violating the Fair Housing Act cannot be addressed in this venue.

Legal Basis

Jurisdiction limits

Topic Tags

  • jurisdiction
  • discrimination
  • Fair Housing Act

Question

Can the HOA fine me for 'disrepair' of paint if the paint is just old but not damaged?

Short Answer

Not necessarily, if evidence shows it is not in disrepair.

Detailed Answer

If witness testimony establishes that the paint is not actually in disrepair, fines based on that allegation may be waived, even if the homeowner needs to eventually repaint to meet new color schemes.

Alj Quote

Also, the evidence established from firsthand witnesses that Respondent’s paint was not in disrepair. Therefore, Respondent should be given the opportunity to move forward with the ARC approval for painting his home and any fines he received in regards to the paint be waived.

Legal Basis

CC&R Section 4.2.7

Topic Tags

  • maintenance
  • paint
  • fines

Question

Do I have to reimburse the HOA's filing fees if I lose the hearing?

Short Answer

Yes, typically for the issues on which the HOA prevails.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ may order the Respondent to reimburse the Petitioner's filing fees. In this case, the Respondent was ordered to pay fees proportional to the two issues the HOA won.

Alj Quote

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Respondent reimburse Petitioner’s filing fee of $1,000.00 in certified funds for the two issues.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01

Topic Tags

  • penalties
  • fees

Question

Does the HOA have to waive fines if a violation was not proven?

Short Answer

Yes.

Detailed Answer

If the HOA fails to prove a specific violation (e.g., that paint was in disrepair), the ALJ may order the Association to waive fines related to that specific issue.

Alj Quote

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Petitioner waive all fines issued to Respondent in regards to the paint issue.

Legal Basis

Administrative Order

Topic Tags

  • fines
  • penalties

Case

Docket No
25F-H019-REL-RHG
Case Title
Tatum Highlands Community Association, Inc. v. Matthew P. Petrovic
Decision Date
2025-12-26
Alj Name
Nicole Robinson
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Danny M. Ford (Attorney for Petitioner)
    Goodman Law Group
  • Kevin Hufnagel (Witness)
    Tatum Highlands Community Association, Inc.
    Board of Directors member
  • Brian Lemke (Witness)
    Tatum Highlands Community Association, Inc.
    Board Vice President; spelled 'Lumpkey' in transcript
  • Elizabeth Lindlam (Observer)
    Goodman Law Group
    Observing attorney

Respondent Side

  • Matthew P. Petrovic (Respondent)
    Represented himself pro se
  • Todd Pehrson (Witness)
    Neighbor of the respondent
  • Thomas Coletto (Witness)
    Neighbor of the respondent
  • Tracy Kennedy (Witness)
    Neighbor and former board president
  • Joe Barry (Witness)
    Appeared for rehearing but had to drop off due to a conflict

Neutral Parties

  • Velva Moses-Thompson (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presided over the initial hearing
  • Nicole Robinson (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presided over the rehearing
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
  • Mandy Neat (Deputy Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Granted the rehearing request

George Wolchko v. Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H025-REL
Agency
Tribunal
Decision Date 5/5/2025
Administrative Law Judge SF
Outcome
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties $150.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner George Wolchko Counsel
Respondent Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association Counsel

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1268559.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:53 (55.5 KB)

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1276022.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:56 (57.0 KB)

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1276027.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:37:03 (7.3 KB)

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1282178.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:37:08 (49.3 KB)

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1288973.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:37:18 (52.0 KB)

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1290761.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:37:24 (50.5 KB)

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1301417.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:37:30 (224.5 KB)

Briefing Document: Wolchko v. Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the key proceedings, arguments, and outcomes of the administrative case George Wolchko v. Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association, Case No. 25F-H025-REL, adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. The Petitioner, George Wolchko, a homeowner, filed a four-issue petition against the Respondent, his Homeowners Association (HOA), alleging violations of Arizona statutes and the community’s governing documents.

The hearing, held on April 14, 2025, resulted in a mixed but largely favorable outcome for the Petitioner. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found the HOA in violation on three of the four claims:

1. Failure to Provide Documents: The HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by not making its management contract with Kachina Management available within the legally mandated ten-business-day period.

2. Failure to Repair Common Wall: The HOA violated its own Bylaws and CC&Rs by failing its duty to maintain and repair a common element (an exterior wall and electrical conduit) after its hired contractor performed improper work, leaving a hole that was not weatherproof.

3. Failure to Fill Board Vacancy: The HOA violated its Bylaws, which mandate a board of no fewer than three members, by operating with only two directors since October 2024.

The HOA prevailed on one claim, Failure to Hold a Special Meeting, as the ALJ determined the Petitioner’s request, while clear in intent, was technically deficient under the Bylaws. The final order deemed Mr. Wolchko the prevailing party on three issues, ordering the HOA to reimburse him $1,500.00 in filing fees, to comply with community documents going forward, and levying a civil penalty of $150.00 against the Association.

Case Overview

Case Number

25F-H025-REL

Jurisdiction

Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)

Presiding Judge

Administrative Law Judge Samuel Fox

Hearing Date

April 14, 2025

Petitioner

George Wolchko

Respondent

Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association

Respondent’s Counsel

Christopher Duren (of Gottlieb Law, PLC)

Key Parties and Witnesses

George Wolchko: The Petitioner, owner of a home in the Victoria Manor community since 2018 and a former board member (2018-2023). Testified on his own behalf.

Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association: The Respondent, a planned community in Mesa, Arizona, consisting of eight units and seven owners.

Joseph Kidd: A current HOA board member, serving since November 2022. Testified for the Respondent.

Michael Mott: A current HOA board member. Was present at the hearing but did not testify.

Kachina Management, Inc.: The HOA’s management company, contracted in April 2024.

Chris Jones: Elected to the board in September 2024 but resigned shortly thereafter, creating the board vacancy at the heart of Claim 4.

Analysis of Claims, Evidence, and Findings

Claim 1: Violation of AZ Law on Delivery of Community Documents

Petitioner’s Allegation: The HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 and its governing documents by failing to provide a copy of the Kachina Management contract despite numerous requests beginning in May 2024.

Petitioner’s Testimony & Evidence (Wolchko):

◦ Made his first formal email request for the contract on May 6, 2024. He followed up on May 12 and May 26.

◦ The management company, Kachina, responded on May 29, offering an in-person review on June 3 or 4.

◦ Wolchko testified that driving 45 minutes each way was not a “reasonably available” means of access, especially when a digital copy existed and he travels internationally. He noted the CC&Rs explicitly allow for delivery by mail.

◦ After canceling an in-person appointment due to an emergency, his repeated requests for a digital or mailed copy were met with insistence on in-person review.

◦ The contract was finally produced in February 2025, nearly a year after the initial request and only after the petition was filed.

Respondent’s Position:

◦ Argued that by offering in-person inspection at their office, they fulfilled their statutory obligation to make records “reasonably available for examination.”

◦ Emails from Kachina Management to Wolchko confirmed they had prepared the documents for his review on the dates offered. They stated Wolchko canceled the appointment and never rescheduled.

ALJ’s Finding: Violation Found. The ALJ concluded that more than ten business days passed between the initial request on May 6, 2024, and the date the documents were made available for examination on June 3, 2024. This delay constituted a failure to comply with A.R.S. § 33-1805.

Claim 2: Failure to Hold a Special HOA Meeting

Petitioner’s Allegation: The HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1804(A) and its Bylaws by failing to hold a special meeting requested via a valid petition signed by 25% of the members (Wolchko and Terrance Greer).

Petitioner’s Testimony & Evidence (Wolchko):

◦ Submitted a formal, signed request on June 19, 2024, to hold an “emergency HOA meeting to address repairs on a community common wall.”

◦ He argued this was a valid petition for a special meeting and that the Board ignored it.

◦ The Respondent falsely claimed the meeting was held during the September annual meeting, but the annual meeting notice and minutes contained no mention of the special meeting’s purpose.

Respondent’s Position:

◦ Argued the request was for an “emergency meeting,” which, under statute, can only be called by the Board of Directors, not by member petition.

◦ Contended there is no provision in the governing documents for 25% of members to call an emergency meeting.

◦ Noted that at the annual meeting in September, Wolchko was explicitly asked if he had any issues to discuss and he declined.

ALJ’s Finding: No Violation. The ALJ found that although the intent was clearly to request a special meeting, the petition was technically deficient. It used the term “emergency meeting,” did not include a place for the meeting, and did not use the phrase “special meeting.” While a “mere technicality,” this was sufficient to deem the petition ineffective. The Respondent was deemed the prevailing party on this issue.

Claim 3: Failure to Uphold CCRs Regarding Common Wall Repairs

Petitioner’s Allegation: The HOA failed its duty to repair a common wall damaged by its own electrician in February 2024.

Petitioner’s Testimony & Evidence (Wolchko):

◦ In February 2024, an HOA-hired contractor, Blue State Electric, performed work on an electrical conduit on his building’s exterior wall, which the board had previously designated a “true common area” with shared 50/50 maintenance costs.

◦ The work left a hole filled with foam that was not watertight. His immediate notification on March 15, 2024, was dismissed by board member Joseph Kidd, who claimed the hole was a pre-existing condition exposed by the work and therefore not the HOA’s responsibility.

◦ After months of the board refusing to act, he investigated the box himself, discovering an HOA wire running through his wall. He stated he only touched the box to prove it was an HOA issue after being told to “deal with it myself.”

◦ He disputed the validity of an $1,867 invoice from a second contractor (Canyon State), stating it was solicited by the board to blame him for damage he did not cause.

Respondent’s Testimony & Evidence (Kidd):

◦ The electrical box and conduit are common elements that serve four buildings.

◦ Wolchko is not a licensed Arizona electrician and had no authorization to touch the common element.

◦ Kidd testified that after Wolchko sent a video of himself pulling the box out, the board hired Canyon State to inspect it.

◦ He acknowledged offering to help Wolchko patch the stucco but denied authorizing any electrical work.

ALJ’s Finding: Violation Found. The ALJ determined that the preponderance of evidence supported that the “Board-hired electrician installed the wrong kind of box and left a section of the wall exposed without proper weather proofing.” Because the wall and electrical conduit were common elements, the board had a duty to maintain them in good repair. The board “declined to correct the problem its contractor caused,” thus violating the Bylaws and CC&Rs.

Claim 4: Failure to Maintain Required Number of Board Members

Petitioner’s Allegation: The HOA violated its Bylaws (Article IV, Section 1), which require a board of “no less than three (3) persons,” by operating with only two members.

Petitioner’s Testimony & Evidence (Wolchko):

◦ Following the September 19, 2024 election, three members were elected: Joseph Kidd, Michael Mott, and Chris Jones.

◦ Chris Jones resigned almost immediately, leaving the board with two members.

◦ He argued that while the bylaws state a vacancy “may be filled” by the remaining directors, this grants authority, it does not waive the fundamental requirement of having at least three members.

◦ He noted that two other owners (himself and Terrance Greer), representing 25% of the HOA, were willing to serve, so the vacancy could be filled.

Respondent’s Testimony & Evidence (Kidd):

◦ Confirmed Jones resigned by early October 2024.

◦ Stated the board reached out to other members who expressed no interest in serving.

◦ Testified that Kachina Management advised them that filling the seat was at their discretion.

◦ The Respondent’s legal argument was that the Bylaw’s use of the word “may” (“may be filled”) makes filling the vacancy optional, not mandatory.

ALJ’s Finding: Violation Found. The ALJ was “not persuasive” by the Respondent’s argument. The decision states: “This provision allows for the appointment, rather than the election, of a Director to a vacant seat. It does not absolve the Board from having the minimum number of Directors.” The preponderance of evidence established that the HOA violated its Bylaws by not having enough Board members.

Final Decision and Order

Prevailing Party: George Wolchko was deemed the prevailing party on Petition Issues 1, 3, and 4. Victoria Manor was deemed the prevailing party on Issue 2.

Reimbursement: The Respondent was ordered to pay the Petitioner $1,500.00 for filing fees within thirty days.

Compliance: The Respondent was directed to “comply with the requirements of its Community Documents going forward.”

Civil Penalty: A civil penalty of $150.00 was levied against the Respondent.

Decision Date: May 5, 2025.

Questions

Question

How long does the HOA have to provide records after I request them?

Short Answer

The HOA has ten business days to fulfill a request to examine or provide copies of records.

Detailed Answer

Under A.R.S. § 33-1805, an association must strictly adhere to a ten-business-day timeframe. In this case, providing access nearly a month after the initial request was found to be a violation of state law.

Alj Quote

A.R.S. § 33-1805 provides an association 'ten business days to fulfill a request for examination' or 'to provide copies of the requested records.' … More than ten business days passed between May 6, 2024, and June 3, 2024. Petitioner demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent, through Kachina, failed to comply with A.R.S. § 33-1805.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • records request
  • deadlines
  • HOA obligations

Question

Can homeowners call an 'emergency meeting' regarding repairs?

Short Answer

Generally, no. Homeowners should request a 'special meeting' instead, as 'emergency meetings' are typically reserved for the Board.

Detailed Answer

While homeowners may petition for a meeting, using the correct terminology is critical. In this case, a petition for an 'emergency meeting' was deemed ineffective because that specific type of meeting is a Board function, whereas homeowners are authorized to request 'special meetings'.

Alj Quote

In the context of the communications about this meeting, it is clear that Petitioner was requesting a 'special meeting' not an 'emergency meeting,' which can only be called by the Board.

Legal Basis

Bylaws

Topic Tags

  • meetings
  • procedure
  • homeowner rights

Question

What specific details must be included in a petition for a special meeting?

Short Answer

The petition must usually include the date, hour, place of the meeting, and the specific purpose or topic.

Detailed Answer

Failure to include all technical details required by the Bylaws—such as the specific place of the meeting or the correct label ('special meeting')—can render a petition invalid, even if it has the required number of signatures.

Alj Quote

The petition did not include a place for the meeting, the topic to be discussed, or the phrase 'special meeting.' … Petitioner’s special meeting request did not fully comply with the requirements of the Bylaws. Although it is a mere technicality, it is sufficient to deem the petition for a special meeting ineffective.

Legal Basis

Bylaws Article III, Section 4

Topic Tags

  • meetings
  • petitions
  • technicalities

Question

Is the HOA responsible if a contractor they hired does poor work on a common element?

Short Answer

Yes. The HOA has a duty to maintain common elements and correct problems caused by their contractors.

Detailed Answer

If an HOA-hired contractor installs incorrect equipment or leaves a common element exposed to damage (like weather), the Board cannot decline to fix it. They retain the obligation to maintain the area in good repair.

Alj Quote

The preponderance of the evidence supports that the Board-hired electrician installed the wrong kind of box and left a section of the wall exposed without proper weather proofing… The Board declined to correct the problem its contractor caused… The preponderance of the evidence supports that the Board failed to maintain this area in good repair in violation of the Bylaws and CC&R.

Legal Basis

Bylaws Article IV, Section 3; CC&R Section 4.05(2)

Topic Tags

  • maintenance
  • common elements
  • contractors

Question

Can the HOA Board operate with fewer members than the Bylaws require?

Short Answer

No. If the Bylaws state a minimum number of directors, the Board must maintain that number.

Detailed Answer

The Board cannot choose to operate with fewer directors than mandated. In this case, operating with two directors when the Bylaws required a minimum of three was a violation.

Alj Quote

Article IV, section 1 of the Bylaws require a Board of no fewer than three people. The preponderance of the evidence established that the Board has consisted of two people for some time… The preponderance of the evidence supports that Respondent violated the Bylaws by not having enough Board members.

Legal Basis

Bylaws Article IV, Section 1

Topic Tags

  • board composition
  • bylaws
  • vacancies

Question

Does a Bylaw saying a vacancy 'may be filled' mean the Board can choose to leave a seat empty?

Short Answer

No. That language typically describes the method of filling the seat (appointment) rather than permission to leave it vacant below the required minimum.

Detailed Answer

HOAs cannot use the word 'may' in vacancy provisions to justify ignoring minimum board size requirements. The provision allows for appointment rather than election to fill the spot, but does not absolve the Board of the duty to have the required number of members.

Alj Quote

Respondent argued that Section 5, Vacancies does not require the Board to fill a vacant position… This argument was not persuasive. This provision allows for the appointment, rather than the election, of a Director to a vacant seat. It does not absolve the Board from having the minimum number of Directors.

Legal Basis

Bylaws

Topic Tags

  • legal interpretation
  • board vacancies
  • bylaws

Question

If I win my hearing against the HOA, can I get my filing fee back?

Short Answer

Yes, the Administrative Law Judge can order the HOA to reimburse the petitioner for the filing fee.

Detailed Answer

In this decision, the HOA was ordered to pay the $1,500.00 filing fee directly to the homeowners within 30 days because the homeowners prevailed on the majority of their issues.

Alj Quote

IT IS ORDERED that Respondent pay Petitioners the filing fee of $1,500.00, to be paid directly to Petitioners within thirty (30) days of this Order.

Legal Basis

Administrative Order

Topic Tags

  • reimbursement
  • fees
  • penalties

Question

Can the HOA be fined for these violations?

Short Answer

Yes, a civil penalty may be levied, though it may be a nominal amount compared to the filing fees.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ has the authority to levy civil penalties for violations of statutes or community documents. In this specific case, a penalty of $150.00 was deemed appropriate.

Alj Quote

A Civil Penalty of $150.00 is found to be appropriate in this matter.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 32-2199.02

Topic Tags

  • fines
  • civil penalty
  • enforcement

Case

Docket No
25F-H025-REL
Case Title
George Wolchko v. Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association
Decision Date
2025-05-05
Alj Name
Samuel Fox
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

How long does the HOA have to provide records after I request them?

Short Answer

The HOA has ten business days to fulfill a request to examine or provide copies of records.

Detailed Answer

Under A.R.S. § 33-1805, an association must strictly adhere to a ten-business-day timeframe. In this case, providing access nearly a month after the initial request was found to be a violation of state law.

Alj Quote

A.R.S. § 33-1805 provides an association 'ten business days to fulfill a request for examination' or 'to provide copies of the requested records.' … More than ten business days passed between May 6, 2024, and June 3, 2024. Petitioner demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent, through Kachina, failed to comply with A.R.S. § 33-1805.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • records request
  • deadlines
  • HOA obligations

Question

Can homeowners call an 'emergency meeting' regarding repairs?

Short Answer

Generally, no. Homeowners should request a 'special meeting' instead, as 'emergency meetings' are typically reserved for the Board.

Detailed Answer

While homeowners may petition for a meeting, using the correct terminology is critical. In this case, a petition for an 'emergency meeting' was deemed ineffective because that specific type of meeting is a Board function, whereas homeowners are authorized to request 'special meetings'.

Alj Quote

In the context of the communications about this meeting, it is clear that Petitioner was requesting a 'special meeting' not an 'emergency meeting,' which can only be called by the Board.

Legal Basis

Bylaws

Topic Tags

  • meetings
  • procedure
  • homeowner rights

Question

What specific details must be included in a petition for a special meeting?

Short Answer

The petition must usually include the date, hour, place of the meeting, and the specific purpose or topic.

Detailed Answer

Failure to include all technical details required by the Bylaws—such as the specific place of the meeting or the correct label ('special meeting')—can render a petition invalid, even if it has the required number of signatures.

Alj Quote

The petition did not include a place for the meeting, the topic to be discussed, or the phrase 'special meeting.' … Petitioner’s special meeting request did not fully comply with the requirements of the Bylaws. Although it is a mere technicality, it is sufficient to deem the petition for a special meeting ineffective.

Legal Basis

Bylaws Article III, Section 4

Topic Tags

  • meetings
  • petitions
  • technicalities

Question

Is the HOA responsible if a contractor they hired does poor work on a common element?

Short Answer

Yes. The HOA has a duty to maintain common elements and correct problems caused by their contractors.

Detailed Answer

If an HOA-hired contractor installs incorrect equipment or leaves a common element exposed to damage (like weather), the Board cannot decline to fix it. They retain the obligation to maintain the area in good repair.

Alj Quote

The preponderance of the evidence supports that the Board-hired electrician installed the wrong kind of box and left a section of the wall exposed without proper weather proofing… The Board declined to correct the problem its contractor caused… The preponderance of the evidence supports that the Board failed to maintain this area in good repair in violation of the Bylaws and CC&R.

Legal Basis

Bylaws Article IV, Section 3; CC&R Section 4.05(2)

Topic Tags

  • maintenance
  • common elements
  • contractors

Question

Can the HOA Board operate with fewer members than the Bylaws require?

Short Answer

No. If the Bylaws state a minimum number of directors, the Board must maintain that number.

Detailed Answer

The Board cannot choose to operate with fewer directors than mandated. In this case, operating with two directors when the Bylaws required a minimum of three was a violation.

Alj Quote

Article IV, section 1 of the Bylaws require a Board of no fewer than three people. The preponderance of the evidence established that the Board has consisted of two people for some time… The preponderance of the evidence supports that Respondent violated the Bylaws by not having enough Board members.

Legal Basis

Bylaws Article IV, Section 1

Topic Tags

  • board composition
  • bylaws
  • vacancies

Question

Does a Bylaw saying a vacancy 'may be filled' mean the Board can choose to leave a seat empty?

Short Answer

No. That language typically describes the method of filling the seat (appointment) rather than permission to leave it vacant below the required minimum.

Detailed Answer

HOAs cannot use the word 'may' in vacancy provisions to justify ignoring minimum board size requirements. The provision allows for appointment rather than election to fill the spot, but does not absolve the Board of the duty to have the required number of members.

Alj Quote

Respondent argued that Section 5, Vacancies does not require the Board to fill a vacant position… This argument was not persuasive. This provision allows for the appointment, rather than the election, of a Director to a vacant seat. It does not absolve the Board from having the minimum number of Directors.

Legal Basis

Bylaws

Topic Tags

  • legal interpretation
  • board vacancies
  • bylaws

Question

If I win my hearing against the HOA, can I get my filing fee back?

Short Answer

Yes, the Administrative Law Judge can order the HOA to reimburse the petitioner for the filing fee.

Detailed Answer

In this decision, the HOA was ordered to pay the $1,500.00 filing fee directly to the homeowners within 30 days because the homeowners prevailed on the majority of their issues.

Alj Quote

IT IS ORDERED that Respondent pay Petitioners the filing fee of $1,500.00, to be paid directly to Petitioners within thirty (30) days of this Order.

Legal Basis

Administrative Order

Topic Tags

  • reimbursement
  • fees
  • penalties

Question

Can the HOA be fined for these violations?

Short Answer

Yes, a civil penalty may be levied, though it may be a nominal amount compared to the filing fees.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ has the authority to levy civil penalties for violations of statutes or community documents. In this specific case, a penalty of $150.00 was deemed appropriate.

Alj Quote

A Civil Penalty of $150.00 is found to be appropriate in this matter.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 32-2199.02

Topic Tags

  • fines
  • civil penalty
  • enforcement

Case

Docket No
25F-H025-REL
Case Title
George Wolchko v. Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association
Decision Date
2025-05-05
Alj Name
Samuel Fox
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • George Wolchko (Petitioner)
    Homeowner of Building 4
  • Terrance Greer (Homeowner)
    Signed the petition for a special meeting alongside George Wolchko

Respondent Side

  • Christopher Duren (Counsel for Respondent)
    Gottlieb Law, PLC
  • Benjamin L. Gottlieb (Counsel for Respondent)
    Gottlieb Law, PLC
  • Joseph Kidd (Board Member / Witness)
    Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association
  • Michael Mott (Board Member)
    Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association
  • Chris Jones (Former Board Member)
    Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association
    Resigned from the board
  • R. Mark Rounsaville (Representative)
    Kachina Management, Inc.
    Filed written answer to the Petition on behalf of Respondent
  • Ashley Love (Property Manager)
    Tri City Property Management
  • Deja Rabone (Property Manager)
    Tri City Property Management

Neutral Parties

  • Samuel Fox (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Alexis Madrid (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Allan, Joseph P v. The Springs Condominiums Association

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H018-REL
Agency Arizona Department of Real Estate
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-03-31
Administrative Law Judge VMT
Outcome
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Joseph P. Allan Counsel
Respondent The Springs Condominiums Association Counsel

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H018-REL Decision – 1263777.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:17 (48.3 KB)

25F-H018-REL Decision – 1288586.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:21 (105.9 KB)

Briefing Document: Case No. 25F-H018-REL, Allan v. The Springs Condominiums Association

Executive Summary

This briefing document synthesizes the key facts, arguments, and legal conclusions from the administrative hearing and subsequent decision in the matter of Joseph P. Allan (Petitioner) versus The Springs Condominiums Association (Respondent). The central issue was the Respondent’s failure to provide financial records to the Petitioner within the timeframe mandated by Arizona law.

The Petitioner, a homeowner and former board member, formally requested to examine bank statements and original invoices by sending emails directly to the association’s board members. The Respondent, represented by the owner of its property management company, did not fulfill these requests within the statutory ten-business-day period. The primary defense offered was that the requests were not sent to the management company, which is the customary channel for processing such items, and the board failed to forward the requests.

The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found conclusively in favor of the Petitioner. The decision established that the legal obligation to comply with Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1258 rests with the association itself, and internal procedural preferences or communication failures between the board and its management agent do not absolve the association of this statutory duty. The documents were ultimately provided on the eve of the hearing, well past the legal deadline. The final order deemed the Petitioner the prevailing party, mandated the refund of his $500 filing fee, and directed the association to ensure future compliance with state law.

Case Overview

Case Number

25F-H018-REL

Jurisdiction

Office of Administrative Hearings, Phoenix, Arizona

Petitioner

Joseph P. Allan

Respondent

The Springs Condominiums Association

Presiding Judge

Administrative Law Judge Velva Moses-Thompson

Hearing Date

March 11, 2025

Decision Date

March 31, 2025

Core Allegation and Legal Framework

The dispute centered on the Petitioner’s allegation that The Springs Condominiums Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1258, which governs a member’s right to access association records.

Statutory Requirement (A.R.S. § 33-1258 A): The statute mandates that “all financial and other records of the association shall be made reasonably available for examination by any member.” It explicitly states, “The association shall have ten business days to fulfill a request for examination.”

Specific Violations Alleged: The Petitioner filed a petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate after the association failed to respond to two separate requests for documents:

1. A request for original invoices for May 2024.

2. A request for bank statements from four association accounts.

Chronology of Events

July 9, 2024: Mr. Allan emails several board members, including the President and Vice President, requesting to examine original invoices for May 2024.

September 23, 2024: Mr. Allan emails several board members requesting to examine bank statements from four association accounts.

October 2024 (approx.): After receiving no response, Mr. Allan files a petition with the Department of Real Estate, alleging the violations. The petition incorrectly listed the request dates as July 29 and September 24, a discrepancy clarified and acknowledged by both parties at the hearing.

January 16, 2025: An “Order Granting Continuance” is issued at the Petitioner’s request, moving the hearing date.

March 10, 2025: At 6:45 PM, the evening before the scheduled hearing, the Respondent provides the requested documents to Mr. Allan.

March 11, 2025: The evidentiary hearing is held before ALJ Velva Moses-Thompson.

March 31, 2025: The ALJ issues the final decision and order.

Analysis of Testimony and Arguments

Petitioner’s Position (Joseph P. Allan)

Mr. Allan, representing himself, argued that he followed the law by submitting his requests directly to the association. His key points were:

Direct Communication with the Association: He intentionally sent his requests to the board members (President, Vice President, Treasurer, and Director) because he considers them to be the “association” as defined by the statute.

Investigation of Management Company: He deliberately bypassed the management company because he was actively investigating its conduct.

Lack of Timely Response: It was undisputed that the association failed to provide the documents within the 10-day period. He confirmed receipt only on March 10, 2025, months after the requests were made.

Past Experience: As a former board member for three years, he was familiar with the association’s financial documents and was requesting them to ensure everything was correct due to perceived problems.

Respondent’s Position (The Springs Condominiums Association)

The association was represented by Belen Guzman, the owner of its management company, SSC Property Management. Her defense centered on a procedural failure, not a denial of the Petitioner’s right to the documents.

Improper Channel of Request: The primary defense was that Mr. Allan failed to follow standard practice by not including the management company in his email requests.

Board’s Failure to Act: Ms. Guzman testified that the board members who received the emails did not forward them or follow up. She stated she was unaware of the requests until after the official complaint was filed and one of the board members, Petri (the president at the time), forwarded an email to her.

Lack of Written Policy: Ms. Guzman acknowledged that the association has no written policy requiring requests to be sent to the management company, but stated the board had verbally instructed Mr. Allan in a meeting to include management on such communications.

Knowledge of Procedure: She argued that as a former board member, Mr. Allan was aware that record requests are typically handled by the management company.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

The ALJ’s decision provided a clear legal interpretation of the events and the responsibilities of the parties.

Key Findings of Fact

• It was undisputed that the Petitioner is a member of the Respondent association.

• The Petitioner made formal requests for records via email to board members on July 9, 2024, and September 23, 2024.

• These requests were not sent to the Respondent’s property management company.

• The Respondent did not respond to the requests within the ten-business-day timeframe required by law.

• The Respondent provided the requested documents on March 10, 2025.

• The Respondent’s representative, Ms. Guzman, did not dispute that the board members had received the requests.

Key Conclusions of Law

• The Petitioner successfully met his burden to prove by a “preponderance of the evidence” that the Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1258(A).

• The Respondent failed to provide any legal authority supporting its defense that a request must be sent to its property management company to be valid.

• The statutory obligation to provide records lies with the “association.” The failure of the board to forward the requests to its management agent does not excuse the association’s non-compliance.

• The ALJ concluded: “Respondent violated A.R.S. section 33-1258(A) when it failed to allow Petitioner to examine the May 2024 original invoices and bank statements from four of Respondent’s accounts, within ten business days of the date of Petitioner’s requests.”

Final Order and Implications

Based on the findings, the ALJ issued a binding order with the following components:

1. Prevailing Party: The Petitioner, Joseph P. Allan, was deemed the prevailing party.

2. Reimbursement: The Respondent was ordered to pay the Petitioner his $500.00 filing fee within thirty days of the order.

3. Future Compliance: The Respondent was formally directed to comply with the requirements of A.R.S. § 33-1258(A) going forward.

4. No Civil Penalty: The judge determined that a civil penalty was not appropriate in this matter.

The primary implication of this decision is that a condominium or homeowner association is directly and legally responsible for fulfilling its statutory obligations. It cannot use internal protocols, informal procedures, or communication breakdowns between its board and third-party vendors (like a management company) as a legal defense for failing to comply with state law.

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{ “case”: { “docket_no”: “25F-H018-REL”, “case_title”: “Allan, Joseph P v. The Springs Condominiums Association”, “decision_date”: “2025-03-31”, “alj_name”: “Velva Moses-Thompson”, “tribunal”: “OAH”, “agency”: “ADRE” }, “questions”: [ { “question”: “If I send a records request to the Board but not the management company, can the HOA ignore it?”, “short_answer”: “No. Sending the request to Board members is sufficient to trigger the HOA’s legal obligation to respond.”, “detailed_answer”: “Even if the management company prefers requests to go directly to them, the Association is still obligated to comply with the law if the Board receives the request. In this case, the management company argued they didn’t know about the request because it went to the Board, but the judge ruled the violation still occurred.”, “alj_quote”: “Respondent did present any legal authority to establish that it was not obligated to comply with A.R.S. section 33-1258(A), for the reason that the requests were not sent to Respondent’s property management company.”, “legal_basis”: “A.R.S. § 33-1258(A)”, “topic_tags”: [ “records request”, “HOA obligations”, “property management” ] }, { “question”: “How many days does the HOA have to let me examine the records I requested?”, “short_answer”: “The HOA must make records available for examination within 10 business days.”, “detailed_answer”: “Arizona law grants the Association ten business days to fulfill a request for examination after receiving it.”, “alj_quote”: “The association shall have ten business days to fulfill a request for examination.”, “legal_basis”: “A.R.S. § 33-1258(A)”, “topic_tags”: [ “timelines”, “records request”, “statutory requirements” ] }, { “question”: “Can the HOA charge me a fee just to look at the records?”, “short_answer”: “No. The HOA cannot charge a member for making material available for review.”, “detailed_answer”: “While the HOA can charge for copies (up to 15 cents per page), they are explicitly prohibited from charging a fee for the act of making materials available for review.”, “alj_quote”: “The association shall not charge a member or any person designated by the member in writing for making material available for review.”, “legal_basis”: “A.R.S. § 33-1258(A)”, “topic_tags”: [ “fees”, “records request”, “homeowner rights” ] }, { “question”: “What happens if I win my hearing against the HOA?”, “short_answer”: “You may be deemed the prevailing party and the HOA can be ordered to reimburse your filing fee.”, “detailed_answer”: “If the judge rules in your favor, they can order the HOA to pay back the filing fee you paid to bring the case. In this decision, the HOA was ordered to pay the homeowner $500.”, “alj_quote”: “IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Respondent pay Petitioner his filing fee of $500.00, to be paid directly to Petitioner within thirty (30) days of this Order.”, “legal_basis”: “Order”, “topic_tags”: [ “penalties”, “reimbursement”, “ruling” ] }, { “question”: “Does the HOA have to provide original invoices if I request them?”, “short_answer”: “Yes. Financial records, including original invoices, must be made reasonably available.”, “detailed_answer”: “The decision confirms that failure to allow examination of original invoices constitutes a violation of the statute governing association records.”, “alj_quote”: “Respondent violated A.R.S. section 33-1258(A) when it failed to allow Petitioner to examine the May 2024 original invoices and bank statements”, “legal_basis”: “A.R.S. § 33-1258(A)”, “topic_tags”: [ “invoices”, “financial records”, “transparency” ] }, { “question”: “What is the standard of proof for proving the HOA violated the law?”, “short_answer”: “Preponderance of the evidence.”, “detailed_answer”: “The homeowner must prove their case by showing it is ‘more probably true than not.’ This is the standard evidentiary weight required in these administrative hearings.”, “alj_quote”: “Petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1258 (A) by a preponderance of the evidence.”, “legal_basis”: “A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)”, “topic_tags”: [ “legal standards”, “burden of proof”, “hearing procedures” ] }, { “question”: “Will the HOA always be fined a civil penalty if they break the law?”, “short_answer”: “Not necessarily. The judge has discretion on whether to apply a civil penalty.”, “detailed_answer”: “Even if a violation is found (as it was in this case regarding the records), the judge may decide that a civil penalty is not appropriate based on the circumstances.”, “alj_quote”: “No Civil Penalty is found to be appropriate in this matter.”, “legal_basis”: “Order”, “topic_tags”: [ “civil penalty”, “fines”, “enforcement” ] } ] }

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Joseph P. Allan (Petitioner)
    The Springs Condominiums Association
    Homeowner, former board member, and member of the Respondent association.

Respondent Side

  • Belen Guzman (Respondent Representative)
    Respondent's property management company
    Owner of the property management company that represents The Springs Condominiums Association.
  • Petri Ahon (Former President of the Board)
    The Springs Condominiums Association

Neutral Parties

  • Velva Moses-Thompson (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Other Participants

  • Carmen (Homeowner)
    The Springs Condominiums Association
    Included on email correspondence.

Tom Barrs vs Desert Ranch Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H2222050-REL-RMD
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2025-04-01
Administrative Law Judge Jenna Clark
Outcome The Administrative Law Judge Decision granted the remanded petition based on the parties' stipulation that the Respondent Homeowners Association violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805 by failing to timely provide the membership roster. The ALJ ordered Respondent to reimburse the Petitioner $500.00 for the filing fee and assessed a civil penalty of $25.00 against Respondent. All other respects of the previous ALJ Decision issued February 21, 2023, remain unchanged.
Filing Fees Refunded $500.00
Civil Penalties $25.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Tom Barrs Counsel Jonathan A. Dessaules, Esq.
Respondent Desert Ranch Homeowners Association Counsel B. Austin Baillio, Esq.

Alleged Violations

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge Decision granted the remanded petition based on the parties' stipulation that the Respondent Homeowners Association violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805 by failing to timely provide the membership roster. The ALJ ordered Respondent to reimburse the Petitioner $500.00 for the filing fee and assessed a civil penalty of $25.00 against Respondent. All other respects of the previous ALJ Decision issued February 21, 2023, remain unchanged.

Key Issues & Findings

Failure to timely provide full membership roster

The remanded issue concerned whether Respondent failed to timely fulfill records requests, specifically a full roster of Association Member names and corresponding property addresses, in violation of ARS § 33-1805. The parties stipulated that a violation of ARS § 33-1805 occurred.

Orders: Petitioner's remanded petition was granted. Respondent was ordered to reimburse Petitioner $500.00 for the filing fee and pay a $25.00 civil penalty.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $25.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA Records Request, Membership Roster, Records Disclosure, Statutory Violation, Stipulation, Remand
Additional Citations:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1804(A)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 1-243
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2102
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01(D)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(B)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.04
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.05
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 41-1092
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 41-1092.09(A)(1)

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H2222050-REL-RMD Decision – 1280942.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:56:28 (50.9 KB)

25F-H2222050-REL-RMD Decision – 1285833.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:56:32 (107.0 KB)

25F-H2222050-REL-RMD Decision – 1286292.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:56:36 (21.7 KB)

25F-H2222050-REL-RMD Decision – 1288559.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:56:40 (149.2 KB)

Briefing Document: The Matter of Barrs v. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association

Executive Summary

This briefing document synthesizes the key events, legal arguments, and ultimate resolution of the administrative case Tom Barrs v. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association (No. 25F-H2222050-REL-RMD). The dispute, which progressed through the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) and the Maricopa County Superior Court, centered on a homeowner’s right to access association records, specifically the membership roster.

The case concluded on March 31, 2025, when the Desert Ranch Homeowners Association (HOA) stipulated to a violation of Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1805. The HOA admitted it failed to timely fulfill a records request for the membership roster, which was submitted on October 21, 2021, and not fulfilled until May 2023—a delay of approximately 19 months.

The resolution required the HOA to pay petitioner Tom Barrs a total of $975.00, which included the reimbursement of a $500.00 filing fee. Citing the respondent’s “unconscionable conduct,” the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) also levied a nominal civil penalty of $25.00 against the association.

A critical turning point in the case was a landmark ruling by the Maricopa County Superior Court on April 4, 2024. The Court reversed an earlier OAH decision, establishing that HOA membership lists containing names and property addresses do not qualify as exempt personal records. The Court reasoned that access to such information is “essential to having a homeowners association” and necessary for members “to actively participate in HOA affairs.” This ruling, however, specified that more private data, such as email addresses and phone numbers, are not subject to mandatory disclosure. The matter was subsequently remanded to the OAH on this single issue, leading to the final stipulated resolution.

——————————————————————————–

I. Case Overview and Parties Involved

This administrative action details a prolonged dispute between a homeowner and his planned community association regarding access to records.

Case Name: In the Matter of: Tom Barrs, Petitioner, vs. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association, Respondent.

Docket Number: 25F-H2222050-REL-RMD

Adjudicating Body: Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)

Presiding Judge: Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Jenna Clark

Petitioner: Tom Barrs (Appeared pro per initially, later represented by Jonathan A. Dessaules, Esq.)

Respondent: Desert Ranch Homeowners Association (Represented by HOA President Michel Olley)

II. Procedural History: From Initial Petitions to Superior Court

The case originated from four separate petitions filed by Mr. Barrs with the Arizona Department of Real Estate, each incurring a $500 filing fee.

Petition Filing Date

Alleged Violation

Subject Matter

April 18, 2022

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Document requests from Apr 2021, Nov 2021, and Feb 2022.

April 18, 2022

A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)

Alleged preclusion of audio recording at a meeting.

April 18, 2022

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Membership roster request from October 2021.

May 12, 2022

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Multiple document requests from Oct 2021 to Mar 2022.

May 25, 2022: The Department of Real Estate consolidated the matters and referred them to the OAH for an evidentiary hearing.

January 9-10, 2023: The consolidated hearing takes place before the OAH.

February 21, 2023: The OAH issues an Administrative Law Judge Decision. It granted portions of the general document request petitions but denied the petitions regarding the audio recording and the membership roster in their entirety. The petitioner’s request for civil penalties was also denied.

March 26, 2023: As the aggrieved party, Mr. Barrs files a timely Dispute Rehearing Petition with the Department of Real Estate.

April 18, 2023: The Department of Real Estate issues an order denying the rehearing request.

June 6, 2023: The Department is notified that Mr. Barrs has appealed its decision to the Maricopa County Superior Court.

III. The Superior Court Ruling: A Key Decision on HOA Record Transparency

On April 4, 2024, the Superior Court issued a pivotal order that reversed the Department of Real Estate’s decision in part, focusing squarely on the issue of membership lists.

The Court concluded that the ALJ had erred in treating the membership roster as exempt personal records. It ruled that such lists, containing names and property addresses, must be made available to all members unless they qualify for a specific statutory exception.

“In this case, Desert Ridge has kept membership lists as a part of their records undoubtedly for a variety of reasons. Unless those records qualify for an exception, they must be made available to all members… Those membership lists containing names and addresses, however, do not appear to fall within the exemption for personal records.”

The Court’s rationale was grounded in the principle of homeowner participation in association governance:

“In addition, in order to actively participate in HOA affairs, all members must have the ability to know who is in the Association and which home or land they own.”

The ruling drew a clear line between public-facing information and private contact details. It affirmed that while names and addresses are necessary for HOA functions, more personal data is not.

“The desire for additional personal information, including email addresses and phone numbers and the like, while understandable, is not necessary for active participation in the affairs of the Association… Email addresses and phone numbers, however, are more personal and less public in nature… While disclosure of names and property addresses… may be essential to having a homeowners association, the disclosure of email addresses and phone numbers is not.”

On August 2, 2024, the Court reaffirmed its ruling and remanded “only the reversed portion of the Department’s Decision” back to the OAH for “proceedings consistent” with its order. The petitioner’s request for attorneys’ fees for his pro per work was denied.

IV. The Remand Process and Clarification of Scope

Following the remand, the OAH scheduled a new hearing for March 31, 2025. A prehearing conference on March 18, 2025, revealed a significant disagreement between the parties on the scope of this new hearing.

Petitioner’s Position: Mr. Barrs argued that the remand reopened all four of his original petitions for reconsideration.

Respondent’s Position: Mr. Olley contended that the remand was narrowly focused on the single issue of the membership roster, as specified by the Superior Court.

ALJ Clark noted that the Department of Real Estate’s hearing notice was “deficient” because it failed to specify the issue for adjudication. To resolve the conflict, she issued a clarifying Minute Entry on March 24, 2025.

The Order explicitly narrowed the scope of the hearing:

“IT IS ORDERED that the issue to be addressed at the hearing… is whether Respondent failed to timely fulfill records requests submitted by Petitioner… by providing Petitioner with a full roster of Association Member names and corresponding property addresses per his request(s) in violation of ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805.”

The order further stated that in all other respects, the original ALJ Decision from February 21, 2023, “remains unchanged and in full force and effect,” thereby validating the respondent’s interpretation.

V. Final Hearing and Resolution

The remanded hearing convened on March 31, 2025. Before testimony could begin, the case moved swiftly to a resolution.

At the outset of the hearing, Mr. Olley, on behalf of the HOA, made a “motion for summary judgment,” conceding a violation of the statute regarding the withholding of the membership roster and offering to reimburse the petitioner’s $500 filing fee. The ALJ treated this as a settlement offer and allowed the parties to confer off the record.

The parties returned having reached a full agreement, which was entered into the record. The key stipulated facts were:

Stipulation

Details

Violation Admitted

The Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide the membership roster.

Specific Request

The violation pertains to the request made by Mr. Barrs on October 21, 2021.

Untimeliness

The roster was not provided until May 2023, approximately 19 months after the request.

Monetary Settlement

The Association agreed to pay Mr. Barrs a total of $975.00.

Based on the parties’ stipulations, ALJ Clark issued a final decision on April 1, 2025, formalizing the outcome:

1. Petition Granted: The petitioner’s remanded petition was granted.

2. Civil Penalty: A civil penalty of $25.00 was assessed against the Respondent. In his closing argument, petitioner’s counsel argued this was warranted due to the HOA’s “unconscionable conduct” in delaying compliance for 19 months.

3. Filing Fee Reimbursement: Respondent was ordered to reimburse the petitioner’s $500.00 filing fee, as per the stipulation and statute.

4. Finality: The decision reaffirmed that all other elements of the original February 21, 2023, OAH decision remain in effect.

Questions

Question

Can my HOA refuse to give me a list of other homeowners' names and addresses?

Short Answer

No. Unless an exception applies, membership lists with names and addresses must be made available so members can participate in HOA affairs.

Detailed Answer

The decision clarifies that membership lists containing names and addresses are not considered 'personal records' that can be withheld. Access to this information is deemed necessary for members to actively participate in the association, such as knowing who belongs to the association and which properties they own.

Alj Quote

Those membership lists containing names and addresses, however, do not appear to fall within the exemption for personal records. … In addition, in order to actively participate in HOA affairs, all members must have the ability to know who is in the Association and which home or land they own.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • Records Request
  • Membership List
  • Homeowner Rights

Question

Am I entitled to receive the email addresses and phone numbers of other homeowners?

Short Answer

No. Email addresses and phone numbers are considered personal and private, unlike physical addresses.

Detailed Answer

While names and physical addresses are necessary for HOA participation, the decision states that email addresses and phone numbers are more personal. Disclosure of this contact information is not essential for association business and could lead to harassment or marketing issues.

Alj Quote

The desire for additional personal information, including email addresses and phone numbers and the like, while understandable, is not necessary for active participation in the affairs of the Association. … Email addresses and phone numbers, however, are more personal and less public in nature.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(4)

Topic Tags

  • Privacy
  • Records Request
  • Personal Records

Question

How quickly must the HOA respond to my request to inspect records?

Short Answer

The HOA has 10 business days to fulfill a request.

Detailed Answer

Arizona law grants the association ten business days to fulfill a request for examination or to provide copies of requested records.

Alj Quote

The association shall have ten business days to fulfill a request for examination. … On request for purchase of copies of records… the association shall have ten business days to provide copies of the requested records.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Topic Tags

  • Timelines
  • Procedural Requirements

Question

Can the HOA charge me a fee for simply looking at the records?

Short Answer

No. The HOA cannot charge for making materials available for review.

Detailed Answer

The statute explicitly prohibits the association from charging a member for the act of making material available for review. Charges are only permitted for copies.

Alj Quote

The association shall not charge a member or any person designated by the member in writing for making material available for review.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Topic Tags

  • Fees
  • Records Request

Question

How much can the HOA charge me for copies of records?

Short Answer

The HOA can charge a maximum of 15 cents per page.

Detailed Answer

If a member requests copies of records, the association is legally permitted to charge a fee, but it is capped at fifteen cents per page.

Alj Quote

An association may charge a fee for making copies of not more than fifteen cents per page.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Topic Tags

  • Fees
  • Records Request

Question

What records is the HOA allowed to withhold from me?

Short Answer

The HOA can withhold privileged legal communications, pending litigation, closed meeting minutes, and specific personal or employee records.

Detailed Answer

The decision outlines specific statutory exceptions where records can be withheld, including attorney-client privilege, pending litigation, minutes from executive sessions, and personal/health/financial records of members or employees.

Alj Quote

Books and records… may be withheld… to the extent that the portion withheld relates to any of the following: 1. Privileged communication… 2. Pending litigation. 3. Meeting minutes… of a session… not required to be open… 4. Personal, health or financial records…

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)

Topic Tags

  • Exceptions
  • Records Request
  • Privacy

Question

Can the HOA be penalized if they delay providing records for a long time?

Short Answer

Yes. Significant delays can result in a violation and civil penalties.

Detailed Answer

In this case, the HOA failed to provide a membership roster for approximately 19 months (from October 2021 to May 2023). This was deemed untimely and resulted in a civil penalty.

Alj Quote

Respondent’s response to Petitioner’s October 21, 2021, records request was untimely, as it was not fulfilled until May 2023. … Petitioner’s request to assess civil penalties totaling $25.00 against Respondent is granted.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • Penalties
  • Enforcement
  • Timelines

Question

If I win my hearing, will the HOA have to reimburse my filing fee?

Short Answer

Yes, the ALJ can order the HOA to reimburse the $500 filing fee.

Detailed Answer

The decision orders the Respondent (HOA) to reimburse the Petitioner's $500 filing fee as required by statute when the Petitioner prevails.

Alj Quote

Respondent shall reimburse Petitioner’s $500.00 filing fee as required by ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 32-2199.01

Topic Tags

  • Costs
  • Remedies

Question

Who has to prove that the HOA broke the law?

Short Answer

The homeowner (Petitioner) bears the burden of proof.

Detailed Answer

The homeowner must prove by a 'preponderance of the evidence' that the HOA violated the statute. This means showing that the contention is more probably true than not.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • Legal Standards
  • Procedure

Case

Docket No
25F-H2222050-REL-RMD
Case Title
Tom Barrs v. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association
Decision Date
2025-04-01
Alj Name
Jenna Clark
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

Can my HOA refuse to give me a list of other homeowners' names and addresses?

Short Answer

No. Unless an exception applies, membership lists with names and addresses must be made available so members can participate in HOA affairs.

Detailed Answer

The decision clarifies that membership lists containing names and addresses are not considered 'personal records' that can be withheld. Access to this information is deemed necessary for members to actively participate in the association, such as knowing who belongs to the association and which properties they own.

Alj Quote

Those membership lists containing names and addresses, however, do not appear to fall within the exemption for personal records. … In addition, in order to actively participate in HOA affairs, all members must have the ability to know who is in the Association and which home or land they own.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • Records Request
  • Membership List
  • Homeowner Rights

Question

Am I entitled to receive the email addresses and phone numbers of other homeowners?

Short Answer

No. Email addresses and phone numbers are considered personal and private, unlike physical addresses.

Detailed Answer

While names and physical addresses are necessary for HOA participation, the decision states that email addresses and phone numbers are more personal. Disclosure of this contact information is not essential for association business and could lead to harassment or marketing issues.

Alj Quote

The desire for additional personal information, including email addresses and phone numbers and the like, while understandable, is not necessary for active participation in the affairs of the Association. … Email addresses and phone numbers, however, are more personal and less public in nature.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(4)

Topic Tags

  • Privacy
  • Records Request
  • Personal Records

Question

How quickly must the HOA respond to my request to inspect records?

Short Answer

The HOA has 10 business days to fulfill a request.

Detailed Answer

Arizona law grants the association ten business days to fulfill a request for examination or to provide copies of requested records.

Alj Quote

The association shall have ten business days to fulfill a request for examination. … On request for purchase of copies of records… the association shall have ten business days to provide copies of the requested records.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Topic Tags

  • Timelines
  • Procedural Requirements

Question

Can the HOA charge me a fee for simply looking at the records?

Short Answer

No. The HOA cannot charge for making materials available for review.

Detailed Answer

The statute explicitly prohibits the association from charging a member for the act of making material available for review. Charges are only permitted for copies.

Alj Quote

The association shall not charge a member or any person designated by the member in writing for making material available for review.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Topic Tags

  • Fees
  • Records Request

Question

How much can the HOA charge me for copies of records?

Short Answer

The HOA can charge a maximum of 15 cents per page.

Detailed Answer

If a member requests copies of records, the association is legally permitted to charge a fee, but it is capped at fifteen cents per page.

Alj Quote

An association may charge a fee for making copies of not more than fifteen cents per page.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Topic Tags

  • Fees
  • Records Request

Question

What records is the HOA allowed to withhold from me?

Short Answer

The HOA can withhold privileged legal communications, pending litigation, closed meeting minutes, and specific personal or employee records.

Detailed Answer

The decision outlines specific statutory exceptions where records can be withheld, including attorney-client privilege, pending litigation, minutes from executive sessions, and personal/health/financial records of members or employees.

Alj Quote

Books and records… may be withheld… to the extent that the portion withheld relates to any of the following: 1. Privileged communication… 2. Pending litigation. 3. Meeting minutes… of a session… not required to be open… 4. Personal, health or financial records…

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)

Topic Tags

  • Exceptions
  • Records Request
  • Privacy

Question

Can the HOA be penalized if they delay providing records for a long time?

Short Answer

Yes. Significant delays can result in a violation and civil penalties.

Detailed Answer

In this case, the HOA failed to provide a membership roster for approximately 19 months (from October 2021 to May 2023). This was deemed untimely and resulted in a civil penalty.

Alj Quote

Respondent’s response to Petitioner’s October 21, 2021, records request was untimely, as it was not fulfilled until May 2023. … Petitioner’s request to assess civil penalties totaling $25.00 against Respondent is granted.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • Penalties
  • Enforcement
  • Timelines

Question

If I win my hearing, will the HOA have to reimburse my filing fee?

Short Answer

Yes, the ALJ can order the HOA to reimburse the $500 filing fee.

Detailed Answer

The decision orders the Respondent (HOA) to reimburse the Petitioner's $500 filing fee as required by statute when the Petitioner prevails.

Alj Quote

Respondent shall reimburse Petitioner’s $500.00 filing fee as required by ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 32-2199.01

Topic Tags

  • Costs
  • Remedies

Question

Who has to prove that the HOA broke the law?

Short Answer

The homeowner (Petitioner) bears the burden of proof.

Detailed Answer

The homeowner must prove by a 'preponderance of the evidence' that the HOA violated the statute. This means showing that the contention is more probably true than not.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Topic Tags

  • Legal Standards
  • Procedure

Case

Docket No
25F-H2222050-REL-RMD
Case Title
Tom Barrs v. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association
Decision Date
2025-04-01
Alj Name
Jenna Clark
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Tom Barrs (petitioner)
  • Jonathan A. Dessaules (petitioner attorney)
    Dessaules Law Group

Respondent Side

  • Michael Olley (HOA President)
    Desert Ranch Homeowners Association
    Appeared on behalf of Respondent. Also referred to as Michael Ali and Michel Olley.
  • B. Austin Baillio (respondent attorney)
    Maxwell & Morgan P.C.
    Counsel for Respondent in official correspondence.

Neutral Parties

  • Jenna Clark (ALJ)
    OAH
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
  • Judge Mikitish (Superior Court Judge)
    Superior Court of Arizona – Maricopa County
    Issued minute entries in related Superior Court proceedings.
  • vnunez (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.
  • djones (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.
  • labril (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.
  • mneat (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.
  • lrecchia (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.
  • gosborn (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.
  • AHansen (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of official correspondence.

Other Participants

  • Brian Schoeffler (observer)
    Observed the hearing.
  • Stephen Barrs (observer)
    Observed the hearing. Also referred to as Steven Bar and Steven Bars.

Miera Phx LLC v. Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H022-REL
Agency
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-03-27
Administrative Law Judge NR
Outcome Petition denied
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Miera Phx LLC Counsel
Respondent Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc. Counsel

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H022-REL Decision – 1264772.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:28 (66.0 KB)

25F-H022-REL Decision – 1275713.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:32 (49.9 KB)

25F-H022-REL Decision – 1275762.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:36 (8.3 KB)

25F-H022-REL Decision – 1287568.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:41 (182.8 KB)

25F-H022-REL Decision – 1318865.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:44 (56.7 KB)

Briefing Document: Miera Phx LLC v. Dartmouth Trace Homeowners Association, Inc.

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the proceedings and outcome of the administrative case Miera Phx LLC v. Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc. (No. 25F-H022-REL). The core of the dispute was the Petitioner’s allegation that the Homeowners Association (HOA) failed to enforce its governing documents, specifically the prohibition against short-term rentals (STRs) of less than 30 days.

The Petitioner, represented by homeowner Angel Miera, argued that the HOA’s inaction allowed STRs to proliferate, leading to safety concerns, nuisance issues, and a degradation of the community’s residential character. A central claim was that a conflict of interest existed, alleging the HOA Board President himself operated an STR. The Petitioner sought mandated enforcement, board reorganization, and financial compensation for HOA fees.

The Respondent HOA, represented by its management company and a board member, countered that enforcing the STR prohibition was practically impossible without “hard proof,” such as an exterior photo with a unit number, which is difficult to obtain. They cited financial constraints, other pressing maintenance priorities, and limitations imposed by state law on collecting fines as significant hurdles. The board also highlighted its own instability, with only two members remaining—both of whom were in the process of selling their properties—and a severe lack of community volunteers.

The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) ultimately denied the petition. The decision concluded that the Petitioner had not met the burden of proof. The ALJ reasoned that the underlying issue was a “homeowner versus homeowner argument,” as the HOA itself cannot violate the rental restrictions, only individual owners can. Furthermore, the governing statute is permissive, stating an association may impose penalties, not that it must. The tribunal found it had no jurisdiction to order the reimbursement of HOA dues or to compel board stability.

Case Overview

Case Number

25F-H022-REL

Petitioner

Miera Phx LLC

Petitioner Representatives

Angel Miera (Manager), Bill Miera (Witness)

Respondent

Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc.

Respondent Representatives

Gladis Hernandez (Community Manager, Ogden & Co.), Fernanda Lopez (Board VP)

Administrative Law Judge

Nicole Robinson

Hearing Date

February 19, 2025

ALJ Decision Date

March 27, 2025

Central Dispute: Failure to Enforce Short-Term Rental Prohibitions

The foundational issue of the case was the Petitioner’s allegation that the Dartmouth Trace HOA was in violation of its own governing documents by failing to enforce the prohibition on short-term rentals.

The primary governing rule cited is Section 17 of the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs), which states:

“No Owner shall permit his Unit to be used for transient or hotel purposes or shall enter into any Lease for less than the entire Unit or for a term of less than thirty (30) days.”

The Petitioner alleged that the HOA’s failure to act on violations of this rule undermined the community’s residential character, stability, and property values.

——————————————————————————–

Petitioner’s Position and Evidence (Miera Phx LLC)

The Petitioner, Angel Miera, a resident of 11 years and an owner for three, built her case on several key arguments supported by extensive documentation submitted to the court.

Pervasive and Unenforced STR Activity

Core Complaint: The community, located near the Chicago Cubs Spring Training facility, has been “overrun” with illegal STRs, transforming it into a “transient hotel.”

Evidence Provided: Miera submitted numerous online listings from platforms like Airbnb and VRBO, dating from 2022 to the week before the hearing, which she alleged were units within Dartmouth Trace.

Community Impact: The influx of transient guests has allegedly led to numerous disturbances, including noise complaints, police calls, and overuse of common amenities like the pool and parking. Miera noted her car had been dinged by vehicles in the adjacent STR unit’s parking space and that oversized vehicles often made it difficult for her to exit her own car.

History of Complaints: Miera documented a three-year history of reporting suspected STRs to the HOA and its management company, Ogden & Company, Inc., which she claimed resulted in no meaningful enforcement action.

Conflict of Interest on the HOA Board

Central Allegation: The failure to enforce the rules stems from a direct conflict of interest, as key board members have allegedly operated STRs themselves.

Board President Rod Proce: Miera submitted a listing she claims was for Board President Rod Proce’s unit (Unit 29), which advertised it as a vacation rental. She also submitted his recent MLS listing for the sale of the unit, in which the description states, “This condo has been a great vacation rental.”

Former Board Member: Allegations were also made against former board member Tiffany Barentine, who reportedly operated STRs and resigned from the board after Miera raised the issue.

Retaliation and Lack of Homeowner Engagement

Perceived Retaliation: Miera testified that since she began raising the STR issue, her requests for essential landscaping maintenance for her unit have been ignored for three years, while common areas advertised in STR listings (e.g., the pool area) remain “impeccable.”

Suppressed Engagement: The HOA moved from monthly meetings to a single annual meeting, which Miera argued made it “nearly impossible for homeowners to effectively raise concerns.” She also testified that her attempt to run for a board position was accepted and then blocked without explanation.

Requested Remedies

1. Mandated Enforcement: An order compelling the HOA to take “meaningful corrective action,” including issuing fines, notices, and liens against illegal STR owners.

2. Oversight and Transparency: Creation of a tracking system for STRs, installation of prohibitive signage, and mandatory disclosures to new buyers about STR restrictions.

3. Board Reorganization: The removal of the two current board members (Rod Proce and Fernanda Lopez) due to alleged mismanagement, conflicts of interest, and the fact that both had their units listed for sale.

4. Financial Compensation: Reimbursement for the $500 case filing fee and over $8,000 in HOA fees paid over the last three years, during which her safety and property concerns were allegedly ignored.

——————————————————————————–

Respondent’s Position and Rebuttal (Dartmouth Trace HOA)

The HOA and its representatives acknowledged the existence of STRs as a problem but argued that their ability to act was severely constrained by practical, legal, and financial limitations.

The Challenge of “Hard Proof”

Enforcement Standard: Community Manager Gladis Hernandez stated that the HOA cannot issue fines without “hard proof” that would withstand a legal challenge. Based on legal advice, this means obtaining an online ad that includes an exterior photo showing the building and a specific unit number.

Impracticality of Investigation: Hernandez argued it would be an improper use of association funds to book suspected STRs simply to obtain their addresses. She stated, “we don’t hunt them down.” The HOA does not have the resources or software to run license plates to identify owners.

Action on Confirmed Units: Regarding Miera’s neighboring unit (Unit 26), Hernandez testified that upon confirmation, she contacted the owner. The owner asserted that her rental listing is for a 30-day minimum, which complies with the CC&Rs.

Resource and Legislative Constraints

Volunteer Board: Board VP Fernanda Lopez emphasized that board members are unpaid volunteers. She herself joined the board as a “disgruntled resident” but was met with the reality of limited budgets and significant responsibilities. The board has only two members, both of whom are selling their units, and no other homeowners are willing to volunteer.

Financial Priorities: The HOA faces significant expenses for larger projects like roofing ($35,000 for parking lot repairs) and rising water bills, leaving limited funds for other issues like comprehensive landscaping or legal battles over STRs.

Limited Power of Fines: Hernandez testified that recent changes in state legislation prevent HOAs from pursuing foreclosure based on unpaid fines. This weakens the power of fines as a deterrent, as homeowners can choose to pay their assessments but ignore fines without severe consequence.

Response to Specific Allegations

Board President’s Actions: Hernandez confirmed that Rod Proce admitted to a past STR listing from around 2022 but stated it was no longer active.

Retaliation Claim: Lopez countered the landscaping claim by stating that Miera’s unit is in the same section as Rod Proce’s unit, and “he’s looking at bare dirt as well.” She asserted that she gave Miera’s unit “preferential treatment” with the new landscaping company to address her long-standing complaints.

——————————————————————————–

Key Testimonies

Angel Miera, Petitioner: “For the governing documents to have any real meaning, they must be enforced. This court has the authority to require the HOA to fulfill its obligations, and I ask that it does so today.”

Gladis Hernandez, Community Manager: “It is not proper to go spend association money to see if this unit… is being Airbnbed out to go and spend association money just to find out if it’s a unit within that community itself. … I believe that every homeowner that pays their assessments would also agree that it’s not proper use of funds.”

Fernanda Lopez, Board Vice President: “I highly recommend that you change your LLC to your name so that you can be part of that board and have those conversations and figure out solutions because it’s not just easy. You can complain every single day, but to find solutions is the difficult part.”

Bill Miera, Petitioner’s Witness, on the Board President’s attitude: “[He said] ‘well, you know, we don’t want to be the meanies and you know, give out violations.’ That was his response.”

——————————————————————————–

Final Judgment and Rationale

On March 27, 2025, Administrative Law Judge Nicole Robinson issued a decision denying the Petitioner’s petition in its entirety.

Conclusions of Law

The ALJ’s decision was based on the following key legal conclusions:

1. Homeowner vs. Homeowner Dispute: The judge determined that the core issue was a dispute between homeowners, not a direct violation by the HOA itself. The decision states, “Ultimately, Petitioner’s underlying complaint is a homeowner versus homeowner argument and that type of complaint is not addressed in this forum.”

2. HOA Cannot Violate Occupancy Rules: The Association itself cannot violate the Use & Occupancy restrictions or the Bylaws cited by the Petitioner; only a homeowner can.

3. Enforcement is Permissive, Not Mandatory: The judge cited Arizona statute (ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1242(A)(11)), which states that an “Association MAY… impose reasonable monetary penalties.” The use of the word “may” makes the action discretionary, not mandatory. Therefore, the HOA’s failure to issue fines was not a violation of the law or its governing documents.

4. Lack of Jurisdiction for Requested Remedies: The tribunal found it had no jurisdiction to order the reimbursement of HOA dues or to intervene in the internal stability of the HOA board.

Final Order

• The Petitioner’s petition was denied.

• The Respondent HOA was not ordered to reimburse the Petitioner’s $500 filing fee.

• The decision noted that the Petitioner is not barred from seeking further legal recourse outside the administrative jurisdiction of the Department of Real Estate.

Questions

Question

Can I use the administrative hearing process to force my HOA to enforce rules against my neighbor?

Short Answer

Likely no. The tribunal views disputes about rule enforcement against other residents as 'homeowner versus homeowner' arguments, which are outside its forum.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ clarified that while a petitioner may be diligent in reporting neighbors (such as those violating short-term rental or parking rules), the underlying complaint is fundamentally between homeowners. The administrative hearing process is designed for disputes between an owner and the association regarding the association's specific violations, not to compel the association to police other owners in specific ways.

Alj Quote

Ultimately, Petitioner’s underlying complaint is a homeowner versus homeowner argument and that type of complaint is not addressed in this forum.

Legal Basis

Jurisdictional Limitations

Topic Tags

  • enforcement
  • jurisdiction
  • neighbor disputes

Question

Is the HOA legally required to fine homeowners who violate the CC&Rs?

Short Answer

No. State statute provides that an association 'may' impose penalties, implying it is discretionary rather than mandatory.

Detailed Answer

The decision highlights that Arizona Revised Statutes grant the association the power to impose penalties but do not mandate it. Therefore, an HOA failing to issue fines is not necessarily violating the statute.

Alj Quote

Petitioner has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 33-1242(A)(11) which states in pertinent part that the 'Association MAY. . . . impose reasonable monetary penalties.'

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1242(A)(11)

Topic Tags

  • fines
  • penalties
  • statutory interpretation

Question

Can the administrative tribunal order the HOA to reimburse my assessment fees if they fail to manage the property well?

Short Answer

No. The tribunal lacks jurisdiction to mandate the reimbursement of HOA dues.

Detailed Answer

Even if a homeowner feels the HOA has failed in its duties or that services (like landscaping) have declined, the Administrative Law Judge does not have the authority to order the return of assessments paid.

Alj Quote

In addition, the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to mandate that the Association reimburse Petitioner’s HOA dues which is out of the purview per this Order.

Legal Basis

Jurisdictional Limitations

Topic Tags

  • assessments
  • reimbursement
  • dues

Question

What is the burden of proof for a homeowner suing their HOA in an administrative hearing?

Short Answer

The homeowner must prove their case by a 'preponderance of the evidence.'

Detailed Answer

This standard means the homeowner must show that their contention is more probably true than not. It is based on the convincing force of the evidence rather than just the amount of evidence or number of witnesses.

Alj Quote

Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated the aforementioned CC&Rs and the Bylaws.

Legal Basis

A.A.C. R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal standards
  • evidence

Question

Can the HOA itself be found guilty of violating use and occupancy restrictions in the CC&Rs?

Short Answer

Generally, no. Use and occupancy restrictions apply to the conduct of homeowners, not the corporate entity of the HOA.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ ruled that an Association cannot violate restrictions designed for residents (like short-term rental bans); only the individual homeowners can violate those specific rules.

Alj Quote

The Association cannot violate the Use & Occupancy restrictions or the Bylaws cited by Petitioner in her complaint; a homeowner can but not the HOA.

Legal Basis

CC&R Interpretation

Topic Tags

  • CC&Rs
  • occupancy restrictions
  • liability

Question

Can the judge force the HOA to fill vacant board seats if no one wants to volunteer?

Short Answer

No. The tribunal cannot compel individuals to run for election or remain in board positions.

Detailed Answer

While a lack of participation or board vacancies may cause instability, the administrative law judge has no jurisdiction to force homeowners to serve on the board or to create stability in governance.

Alj Quote

The Tribunal heard testimony regarding the lack of participation of homeowners to become Board Directors, however, individuals cannot be forced into an election or made to remain in their positions.

Legal Basis

Governance

Topic Tags

  • board of directors
  • elections
  • volunteers

Question

Does the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) have the authority to interpret the contract between a homeowner and the HOA?

Short Answer

Yes. The OAH has the authority to interpret the contract (CC&Rs and Bylaws) between the parties.

Detailed Answer

The decision affirms that the OAH is an independent agency authorized to decide contested cases and interpret the governing documents (contract) between the association and the owner.

Alj Quote

OAH has the authority to interpret the contract between the parties.

Legal Basis

Tierra Ranchos Homeowners Ass’n v. Kitchukov

Topic Tags

  • contract interpretation
  • OAH authority

Case

Docket No
25F-H022-REL
Case Title
Miera Phx LLC v. Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc
Decision Date
2025-03-27
Alj Name
Nicole Robinson
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

Can I use the administrative hearing process to force my HOA to enforce rules against my neighbor?

Short Answer

Likely no. The tribunal views disputes about rule enforcement against other residents as 'homeowner versus homeowner' arguments, which are outside its forum.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ clarified that while a petitioner may be diligent in reporting neighbors (such as those violating short-term rental or parking rules), the underlying complaint is fundamentally between homeowners. The administrative hearing process is designed for disputes between an owner and the association regarding the association's specific violations, not to compel the association to police other owners in specific ways.

Alj Quote

Ultimately, Petitioner’s underlying complaint is a homeowner versus homeowner argument and that type of complaint is not addressed in this forum.

Legal Basis

Jurisdictional Limitations

Topic Tags

  • enforcement
  • jurisdiction
  • neighbor disputes

Question

Is the HOA legally required to fine homeowners who violate the CC&Rs?

Short Answer

No. State statute provides that an association 'may' impose penalties, implying it is discretionary rather than mandatory.

Detailed Answer

The decision highlights that Arizona Revised Statutes grant the association the power to impose penalties but do not mandate it. Therefore, an HOA failing to issue fines is not necessarily violating the statute.

Alj Quote

Petitioner has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 33-1242(A)(11) which states in pertinent part that the 'Association MAY. . . . impose reasonable monetary penalties.'

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 33-1242(A)(11)

Topic Tags

  • fines
  • penalties
  • statutory interpretation

Question

Can the administrative tribunal order the HOA to reimburse my assessment fees if they fail to manage the property well?

Short Answer

No. The tribunal lacks jurisdiction to mandate the reimbursement of HOA dues.

Detailed Answer

Even if a homeowner feels the HOA has failed in its duties or that services (like landscaping) have declined, the Administrative Law Judge does not have the authority to order the return of assessments paid.

Alj Quote

In addition, the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to mandate that the Association reimburse Petitioner’s HOA dues which is out of the purview per this Order.

Legal Basis

Jurisdictional Limitations

Topic Tags

  • assessments
  • reimbursement
  • dues

Question

What is the burden of proof for a homeowner suing their HOA in an administrative hearing?

Short Answer

The homeowner must prove their case by a 'preponderance of the evidence.'

Detailed Answer

This standard means the homeowner must show that their contention is more probably true than not. It is based on the convincing force of the evidence rather than just the amount of evidence or number of witnesses.

Alj Quote

Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated the aforementioned CC&Rs and the Bylaws.

Legal Basis

A.A.C. R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal standards
  • evidence

Question

Can the HOA itself be found guilty of violating use and occupancy restrictions in the CC&Rs?

Short Answer

Generally, no. Use and occupancy restrictions apply to the conduct of homeowners, not the corporate entity of the HOA.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ ruled that an Association cannot violate restrictions designed for residents (like short-term rental bans); only the individual homeowners can violate those specific rules.

Alj Quote

The Association cannot violate the Use & Occupancy restrictions or the Bylaws cited by Petitioner in her complaint; a homeowner can but not the HOA.

Legal Basis

CC&R Interpretation

Topic Tags

  • CC&Rs
  • occupancy restrictions
  • liability

Question

Can the judge force the HOA to fill vacant board seats if no one wants to volunteer?

Short Answer

No. The tribunal cannot compel individuals to run for election or remain in board positions.

Detailed Answer

While a lack of participation or board vacancies may cause instability, the administrative law judge has no jurisdiction to force homeowners to serve on the board or to create stability in governance.

Alj Quote

The Tribunal heard testimony regarding the lack of participation of homeowners to become Board Directors, however, individuals cannot be forced into an election or made to remain in their positions.

Legal Basis

Governance

Topic Tags

  • board of directors
  • elections
  • volunteers

Question

Does the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) have the authority to interpret the contract between a homeowner and the HOA?

Short Answer

Yes. The OAH has the authority to interpret the contract (CC&Rs and Bylaws) between the parties.

Detailed Answer

The decision affirms that the OAH is an independent agency authorized to decide contested cases and interpret the governing documents (contract) between the association and the owner.

Alj Quote

OAH has the authority to interpret the contract between the parties.

Legal Basis

Tierra Ranchos Homeowners Ass’n v. Kitchukov

Topic Tags

  • contract interpretation
  • OAH authority

Case

Docket No
25F-H022-REL
Case Title
Miera Phx LLC v. Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc
Decision Date
2025-03-27
Alj Name
Nicole Robinson
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Angel Miera (Petitioner)
    Miera Phx LLC
    Manager of Miera Phx LLC; self-represented
  • Bill Miera (Witness)
    Father of Angel Miera

Respondent Side

  • Gladis Hernandez (Representative)
    Ogden & Company, Incorporated
    Community Manager for Dartmouth Trace HOA
  • Fernanda Lopez (Representative)
    Dartmouth Trace Homeowner Associations, Inc.
    Vice President and Board Member of Dartmouth Trace HOA
  • Lori T. Percival (Representative)
    Ogden & Company, Incorporated
    President of Ogden & Company; included on the transmission/service list

Neutral Parties

  • Nicole Robinson (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presiding judge for the hearing
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Included on the transmission/service list

Debbie Westerman v. Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H029-REL
Agency Office of Administrative Hearings
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-03-12
Administrative Law Judge SF
Outcome
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Debbie Westerman Counsel
Respondent Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association Counsel

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H029-REL Decision – 1282218.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:38:09 (95.6 KB)

Briefing Document: Westerman v. Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association (Case No. 25F-H029-REL)

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the administrative hearing and subsequent decision regarding the matter of Debbie Westerman v. Bridgewood Nine 30 Property Owners Association. The dispute centered on a records request initiated by Westerman (Petitioner) against the Association (Respondent) concerning legal expenditures and financial documentation spanning the last decade.

The core of the conflict involved the Petitioner’s demand for detailed legal billing statements to investigate potential fund misappropriation, while the Respondent maintained that such records were exempt from disclosure under Arizona's statutory protections for attorney-client privilege. Following an evidentiary hearing held on February 20, 2025, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Samuel Fox ruled in favor of the Association, determining that the requested documents were privileged and that the Petitioner failed to prove a violation of the relevant condominium statutes.


Case Overview and Participants

The hearing was conducted at the Office of Administrative Hearings as an independent state agency matter pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.

Role Name Affiliation
Administrative Law Judge Samuel Fox Office of Administrative Hearings
Petitioner Debbie Westerman Homeowner/Member, Bridgewood Nine 30
Respondent Counsel Mark Lines Attorney, Shaw & Lines, LLC
Witness (Respondent) Michael Brubaker President of the Board/Community Manager
Witness (Respondent) Roy Shot Board Member

Detailed Analysis of Key Themes

1. Statutory Framework and Procedural Accuracy

A significant portion of the proceedings addressed the specific statutes governing records requests. The Petitioner originally filed the petition citing A.R.S. § 33-1805, which pertains to Planned Communities. However, the Respondent is a Condominium Association, making the applicable law A.R.S. § 33-1258.

The Respondent’s counsel argued that the Petitioner's request was "procedurally and substantively flawed" because:

  • It cited the incorrect statutory scheme.
  • It failed to formally request an inspection of records, which is the primary right granted under the statute.
  • It did not provide notice that legal action would be pursued if records were not produced within the statutory 10-day window.

The ALJ ultimately decided to address the matter based on the correct condominium statute (A.R.S. § 33-1258), noting no "undue prejudice" in correcting the reference.

2. Attorney-Client Privilege vs. Transparency

The Petitioner sought "all statements from Shaw and Lines from 2015 through today" to verify legal spending, citing a specific concern regarding $50,000 spent in 2018. She clarified during the hearing that she only desired "numbers" and was not interested in confidential details.

The Association countered that under A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1), books and records may be withheld if they relate to privileged communications between the association and its attorney. The Respondent argued that legal invoices constitute privileged work product and communications. The ALJ upheld this position, finding that the Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof because the documents she sought were legally exempt from disclosure.

3. Allegations of Financial Mismanagement

The Petitioner raised several concerns regarding the Association's financial operations:

  • Report Distribution: Allegations that financial reports are prepared and distributed by Board members (Michael Brubaker and Roy Shot) rather than the official accountant.
  • Operating Practices: Concerns that Board members are "running a business" within the association.
  • Lack of Transparency: Claims that the Board "passed these issues with everyone's knowledge and consent" but failed to provide verification of expenditures to the members.

The Association disputed these claims, providing a financial flowchart and meeting minutes as evidence of their standard operating procedures and efforts to advise the community on accounting methods.

4. Communication and Meeting Invitations

A point of contention was the communication between the parties following the November 26, 2024, request.

  • The 10-Day Rule: The Association admitted to not responding within the statutory ten business days but highlighted subsequent efforts to engage.
  • The Meeting Invitation: Respondent provided evidence that the Petitioner was invited to a Board meeting on January 9, 2025, to discuss her concerns. The Petitioner claimed she was "uninvited" via a note from Michael Brubaker, who allegedly stated her participation was "unwise" due to ongoing litigation against the Association.
  • Document Production: The Association produced several documents (flowcharts, rules, and minutes) on January 18, 2025. The Petitioner testified she received these but had not reviewed them prior to the hearing.

Important Quotes with Context

From Petitioner (Debbie Westerman)

"I would just like to know how much money our association has paid in legal fees in the last decade… I don't care who it's for. I don't care what it was about. I just want the figures."

  • Context: This statement defines the Petitioner’s primary objective: a purely financial audit of legal costs to ensure funds were not misappropriated.
From Respondent Counsel (Mark Lines)

"Miss Westerman is quick to rush to seek legal redress based on insufficient and procedurally deficient methods of request. And it's ironic… she is probing into legal fees… when she herself has been involved in the litigation with my client over many years."

  • Context: The Respondent argued that the Petitioner's own history of filing lawsuits (in city, state, and bankruptcy courts) was a primary driver of the high legal fees she was now questioning.
From the Administrative Law Judge (Samuel Fox)

"Based upon counsel’s representation that the requested documents were privileged, the Tribunal finds that the preponderance of the evidence supports the requested documents were privileged."

  • Context: This is the pivotal legal finding of the March 12, 2025, decision, which concluded that the Association had the legal right to withhold the specific records requested.

Actionable Insights

For Association Boards
  • Strict Adherence to Timelines: Although the Association prevailed, the ALJ noted the failure to respond within ten business days. Boards should prioritize responding to records requests—even if the response is a formal denial based on privilege—within the statutory window to avoid administrative petitions.
  • Clear Distinction of Privilege: When withholding records, Boards should explicitly cite A.R.S. § 33-1258(B) (for condos) or A.R.S. § 33-1805(B) (for planned communities) to provide a legal basis for non-disclosure.
  • Record Maintenance: The Respondent noted that statutes typically require maintaining records for three years. Demands for ten years of records (as requested in this case) may be considered "overburdensome" and beyond statutory requirements.
For Association Members
  • Verify Statutory Basis: Before filing a petition, members must ensure they are citing the correct chapter of Title 33 (Condominiums vs. Planned Communities).
  • Understand Inspection Rights: The statutory right is primarily for the examination and copying of records. A request for an association to generate new reports or "email all statements" may not be technically covered under the right to inspect.
  • Review Produced Materials: The Petitioner’s failure to review documents provided by the Association prior to the hearing weakened her position. Members should thoroughly audit any produced materials to identify specific gaps before proceeding to a hearing.

Final Decision

The Administrative Law Judge ordered that the Respondent be deemed the prevailing party. The Petitioner's request for the intervention of the Arizona Department of Real Estate (ADRE) was denied because the Association acted within its rights to withhold privileged attorney-client communications.

Study Guide: Westerman v. Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association

This study guide provides a comprehensive overview of the administrative hearing and subsequent decision regarding the matter of Debbie Westerman v. Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association (Case No. 25F-H029-REL). It analyzes the legal arguments, statutory framework, and the final ruling issued by the Office of Administrative Hearings.


I. Case Overview and Key Concepts

Central Dispute

The case originated from a petition filed by Debbie Westerman (Petitioner), a homeowner in the Bridgewood Nine 30 condominium complex, against the Bridgewood Nine 30 Property Owners Association (Respondent). The Petitioner sought access to financial records—specifically, legal billing statements from the law firm Shaw & Lines—covering the period from 2015 to 2024. The Petitioner’s stated goal was to verify expenditures and address concerns regarding the potential misappropriation of funds for legal representation.

Timeline of Significant Events
  • November 26, 2024: Petitioner sends an email request for legal statements from 2015 to the present.
  • December 16, 2024: Petitioner files a formal petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate (ADRE).
  • December 30, 2024: Board President Michael Brubaker invites Petitioner to a board meeting (which she ultimately did not attend).
  • January 18, 2025: Respondent provides certain records, including a financial flowchart and meeting minutes.
  • February 20, 2025: Evidentiary hearing held before Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Samuel Fox.
  • March 12, 2025: ALJ issues a decision in favor of the Respondent.
Core Legal Issues
  1. Statutory Application: Whether the dispute was governed by the Planned Community Act or the Condominium Act.
  2. Compliance with the "10-Day Rule": Whether the Association failed to fulfill a records request within the statutory timeframe.
  3. Privileged Communications: Whether legal billing invoices are exempt from disclosure under attorney-client privilege.
  4. Procedural Validity: Whether the Petitioner’s request was "procedurally and substantively flawed" due to citing incorrect statutes and failing to request an inspection.

II. Statutory Framework

The following Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) were central to the adjudication of this matter:

Statute Description Relevance to Case
A.R.S. § 33-1258 Condominium Act: Records The governing statute for this case. It requires associations to make records available within 10 business days.
A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1) Privilege Exemption Allows associations to withhold "privileged communication between an attorney for the association and the association."
A.R.S. § 33-1805 Planned Community Act Incorrectly cited by the Petitioner in the initial filing; applies to planned communities, not condominiums.
A.R.S. § 32-2199.01 ADRE Jurisdiction Permits members of condominium associations to file petitions for hearings regarding alleged statutory violations.
A.R.S. § 41-1092 OAH Authority Authorizes the Office of Administrative Hearings to conduct hearings on state regulations.

III. Short-Answer Practice Questions

1. Who represented the Respondent during the hearing, and what was his primary argument regarding the legal records?

  • Answer: Mark Lines represented the Respondent. He argued that the legal billing statements were privileged attorney-client communications and were therefore explicitly exempt from disclosure under A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1).

2. Why did the Petitioner specifically seek legal records from 2018?

  • Answer: The Petitioner heard at an annual meeting that the association spent approximately $50,000 in court costs in 2018 and wanted to verify if the board at that time had authorized those expenditures with the community’s knowledge.

3. What was the "10-day requirement" discussed during the hearing?

  • Answer: Under A.R.S. § 33-1258, an association has ten business days to fulfill a request for the examination of records or to provide copies of requested records.

4. What procedural error did the Respondent’s counsel point out regarding the Petitioner’s initial filing?

  • Answer: The Petitioner cited A.R.S. § 33-1805 (Planned Community statute) instead of the correct statute for condominiums, A.R.S. § 33-1258.

5. What was the ALJ’s ultimate finding regarding the Petitioner’s burden of proof?

  • Answer: The ALJ found that the Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof because the documents she requested were privileged. Therefore, the 10-day production requirement did not apply to those specific records.

6. Did the Petitioner attend the board meeting scheduled for January 9, 2025? Why or why not?

  • Answer: No. While the Petitioner was initially invited, she claimed she was later "uninvited" by Michael Brubaker, who reportedly stated it was "unwise" for her to participate in community projects while in litigation against the association.

IV. Essay Prompts for Deeper Exploration

1. Transparency vs. Privilege: The Scope of A.R.S. § 33-1258. Analyze the tension between a homeowner's right to inspect financial records and an association’s right to protect privileged legal communications. In your essay, discuss whether the "privilege" exemption in the statute creates an obstacle to financial transparency, using the Westerman case as a primary example.

2. Procedural Formality in Records Requests. The Respondent’s counsel argued that the Petitioner's request was deficient because it did not specify a "right to inspect" or a "time schedule." Discuss the importance of procedural compliance in administrative law. Should a pro se petitioner (someone representing themselves) be held to the same standard of statutory precision as a legal professional? Refer to the ALJ's comments regarding "undue prejudice" in your answer.

3. The Role of the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH). Describe the function of the OAH in resolving disputes between homeowners and associations. Based on the transcript and the decision, explain the rules of evidence in this forum, the role of the ALJ, and the timeline for issuing a decision. How does this forum differ from a standard civil trial?


V. Glossary of Important Terms

  • Administrative Law Judge (ALJ): An independent official (in this case, Sam Fox) appointed to preside over hearings and issue decisions regarding state regulations.
  • A.R.S. (Arizona Revised Statutes): The codified laws of the state of Arizona.
  • Burden of Proof: The obligation of a party (the Petitioner) to prove their allegations. In this case, the standard was a "preponderance of the evidence."
  • Condominium Act: The set of Arizona laws specifically governing the management and records of condominium associations.
  • Petitioner: The party who initiates the legal action or petition (Debbie Westerman).
  • Preponderance of the Evidence: A legal standard meaning that the evidence shows the contention is "more probably true than not."
  • Privileged Communication: Confidential interactions between an attorney and a client that are protected from disclosure in legal proceedings.
  • Respondent: The party against whom a petition is filed (Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association).
  • Statutory Compliance: The act of adhering to the requirements set forth in a law or statute.

HOA Transparency vs. Legal Privilege: Lessons from the Westerman v. Bridgewood Hearing

1. Introduction: The High Cost of Curiosity

On February 20, 2025, the Office of Administrative Hearings convened for Matter 25F-H029-REL, a case that serves as a sobering masterclass in the friction between homeowner transparency and board-level legal privilege. For homeowners, the case highlights that curiosity carries a literal price: Petitioner Debbie Westerman paid a $500 filing fee to the Arizona Department of Real Estate (ADRE) to challenge the Bridgewood Nine 30 Property Owners Association.

The dispute centered on a homeowner’s decade-long quest for legal billing records. However, as the hearing unfolded, it became clear that even when a homeowner’s intent is oversight, a failure to adhere to procedural precision can turn a $500 petition into an expensive lesson in administrative law. This case pitted a member’s "right to know" against a board’s duty to protect the confidentiality of its legal strategy.

2. The Paper Trail: Analyzing the Request

The conflict was ignited by a November 26, 2024, email from Westerman to the board. Seeking to "dispel concerns of having misappropriated funds for legal representation," she demanded all legal statements from the firm Shaw and Lines from 2015 to the present.

During the hearing, Westerman maintained a "numbers only" defense, arguing she only sought the financial figures—not the legal strategy—to ensure the board had properly voted on the expenditures. The Association, represented by Community Manager and Board President Michael Brubaker, countered by highlighting a breakdown in communication. While the board invited Westerman to a meeting on January 9, 2025, to discuss the records, she did not attend. Westerman testified she felt "uninvited" after receiving a note suggesting her participation was "problematic" due to pending litigation. This "uninvited" narrative illustrates a common pitfall in HOA governance: once a dispute enters the realm of litigation, the collaborative relationship necessary for transparency often collapses.

3. Navigating the Legal Maze: A.R.S. § 33-1258

A pivotal moment in the hearing involved the Petitioner’s citation of the wrong statute. Westerman initially filed under the Planned Community Act, but Bridgewood is legally organized as a condominium.

Statutory Comparison

Petitioner's Cited Authority (Planned Communities) Correct Statutory Authority (Condominiums)
A.R.S. § 33-1805 A.R.S. § 33-1258

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Samuel Fox corrected the record, but the error was more than a technicality. For an HOA board, a homeowner citing the wrong statute can be framed as a failure of "notice." The Association argued the petition was "procedurally and substantively flawed" because Westerman failed to specify a time for inspection or cite the correct governing law, effectively providing the board a procedural escape hatch to deny the request.

4. The 10-Day Rule and the "Privilege" Exception

Arizona law generally requires associations to fulfill records requests within 10 business days. However, this "10-day clock" is not universal. Under A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1), an association may withhold records that constitute privileged communication between the association and its attorney.

The Association’s counsel, Mark Lines, argued—and the ALJ agreed—that legal invoices containing descriptions of services are inherently privileged. The critical legal synthesis here is that because the documents were privileged under Subsection B, the 10-day production mandate never actually applied.

Furthermore, the Association challenged the scope of the request. While Westerman requested a decade of data, Counsel Lines noted that associations are generally only required to maintain financial records for three years. Requesting records back to 2015 was deemed "overburdensome" and beyond the statutory requirement, regardless of the privilege issue.

5. The Verdict: Why the Petition Failed

ALJ Samuel Fox ruled in favor of the Association, designating Bridgewood as the prevailing party. The decision was based on two primary conclusions:

  • The Privilege Shield: Because the requested invoices were privileged under § 33-1258(B)(1), the Association did not violate the law by withholding them.
  • The Compliance Threshold: The Association was found to have "substantially complied" with its duties by providing non-privileged materials, such as financial flowcharts and meeting minutes, even if they did not satisfy the Petitioner's specific demand for invoices.

The Judge also refused to litigate historical grievances prior to the November 2024 request, narrowing the focus strictly to the legal validity of that specific records demand.

6. Essential Takeaways for Homeowners and Boards

This hearing offers high-stakes lessons for anyone involved in community governance:

  • Specify "Inspection and Copying": To trigger statutory protections, homeowners should request to "inspect and copy" records at the association's office rather than demanding "statements" via email.
  • Acknowledge Data Limits: Boards are only legally obligated to provide records from the last three years. Requests for a "decade of data" are frequently "dead on arrival" due to being overburdensome.
  • Review Before You Sue: A homeowner’s credibility is severely undermined if they file a petition claiming "non-responsiveness" but admit in testimony they never opened the attachments the board did send. In this case, Westerman admitted she had not reviewed the flowcharts the board provided on January 18.
  • Privilege is Absolute: Even if a homeowner "only wants numbers," legal invoices are protected. Strategy and billing are often inextricably linked, and the court will protect that privilege.
7. Conclusion: Seeking Harmony over Litigation

The Westerman v. Bridgewood case highlights a "circular financial drain" that plagues many HOAs. As the Association's counsel noted, repeated administrative petitions increase the very legal fees that homeowners are trying to investigate.

While transparency is a pillar of HOA law, it is not an absolute right to every document. Homeowners who skip board meetings or choose litigation over collaborative inquiry often find themselves paying $500 to lose a case on a procedural technicality. For boards, maintaining a clear paper trail of "substantial compliance" remains the best defense. Ultimately, the most effective way to manage a community's legal budget is to prioritize collaborative problem-solving over the redress of the court.

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Debbie Westerman (Petitioner)

Respondent Side

  • Mark Lines (Attorney)
    Shaw & Lines, LLC
  • Michael L. Brubaker (President and Community Manager)
    Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association
  • Roy Shot (Board Member)
    Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association
  • Danny Hudro (Secretary)
    Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association

Neutral Parties

  • Samuel Fox (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Millard C. and Samantha Finch v. Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H017-REL
Agency
Tribunal Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings
Decision Date 2/26/2025
Administrative Law Judge SF
Outcome complete
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Millard C. Finch Counsel
Respondent Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch Counsel

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H017-REL Decision – 1316094.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:33:56 (51.5 KB)

25F-H017-REL Decision – 1325522.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:00 (120.7 KB)

25F-H017-REL Decision – 1277396.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:34:04 (207.4 KB)

Briefing Document: Analysis of Finch v. Mountain Gate Community Re-hearing

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the administrative re-hearing in the matter of Samantha and Millard C. Finch v. Mountain Gate Community, Case No. 25F-H017-REL-RHG. The re-hearing, held on June 13, 2025, resulted in a definitive dismissal of the Petitioners’ Dispute Petition, as formalized in the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decision issued on July 3, 2025.

The core of the proceeding was a fundamental misunderstanding by the Petitioners regarding the re-hearing’s legally restricted scope. The Arizona Department of Real Estate granted the re-hearing solely on the narrow grounds of potential procedural errors—specifically, “error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors of law occurring during the proceeding.” However, the Petitioners consistently attempted to re-litigate the merits of the original case, arguing against the initial ALJ’s findings of fact and legal conclusions.

The presiding ALJ, Kay A. Abramsohn, repeatedly clarified that disagreement with the outcome of the original decision was not a permissible basis for this re-hearing. The Petitioners’ specific claims of procedural error were systematically addressed and found to be without merit:

Rejected Evidence: The claim that evidence was rejected was unsubstantiated. The official record showed the Petitioners’ exhibits were admitted in the original hearing, and a challenged line of questioning was identified as judicial guidance on argumentation, not a rejection of evidence.

Improper Statute: The allegation that the Respondent used a “counterfeit” statute (A.R.S. § 33-1807) was refuted. The Respondent’s counsel explained that the version submitted was the one legally in effect during the period of the dispute, prior to a 2024 legislative amendment.

Procedural Unfairness: The Petitioners’ concerns about insufficient time to prepare were directed at the Arizona Department of Real Estate, a separate agency from the Office of Administrative Hearings, which has no jurisdiction over the Department’s timelines.

Ultimately, the Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof to demonstrate any procedural or legal errors occurred during the initial hearing. The re-hearing confirmed the integrity of the original proceeding, and the initial decision stands.

Case Overview

Detail

Case Name

Samantha and Millard C. Finch, Petitioners, v. Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch, Respondent.

Original Case No.

25F-H017-REL

Re-hearing Case No.

25F-H017-REL-RHG

Presiding ALJ (Re-hearing)

Kay A. Abramsohn

Petitioner Representative

Samantha Finch (representing herself and Millard C. Finch)

Respondent Representative

Attorney B. Austin Baillio (Maxwell & Morgan, P.C.)

Timeline of Key Events

February 7, 2025: The original administrative hearing is held.

February 26, 2025: The initial ALJ Decision is issued, finding the Respondent to be the prevailing party.

March 28, 2025: The Petitioners file a timely Dispute Rehearing Petition.

April 29, 2025: The Arizona Department of Real Estate (ADRE) issues an Order Granting Re-Hearing on limited grounds.

June 13, 2025: The re-hearing is conducted before the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH).

July 3, 2025: The final ALJ Decision on the re-hearing is issued, dismissing the Petitioners’ petition.

The Central Issue: Limited Scope of the Re-hearing

The defining characteristic of the June 13, 2025, re-hearing was the persistent disconnect between its mandated legal scope and the arguments advanced by Petitioner Samantha Finch.

Granted vs. Denied Grounds for Re-hearing

The ADRE’s Order on April 29, 2025, granted the re-hearing on one specific ground:

Granted: “Error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors of law occurring during the proceeding.”

Crucially, the ADRE did not grant a re-hearing on other grounds requested by the Petitioners, including:

Denied: “That the findings of fact or decision was arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.”

Denied: “That the findings of fact or decision was not supported by the evidence or was contrary to law.”

Petitioner’s Misinterpretation of Scope

Throughout the hearing, Ms. Finch repeatedly attempted to argue the substance of the original case, focusing on her disagreement with the initial ALJ’s factual findings and conclusions. Her arguments centered on topics such as the classification of a December payment as a “prepayment” and the application of funds to late fees, which she believed were contrary to the evidence she presented.

ALJ Abramsohn was compelled to repeatedly intervene to clarify the proceeding’s purpose:

“If you disagree with the way in which the judge came to conclusion based on the evidence that was admitted to the record, that is number seven and eight and that is not what the reharing was granted.”

“This hearing is not to appeal your disagreement with the decision. And Mr. Balio would agree with me on that. That would be I mean take a look at your petition number seven and eight.”

This fundamental misapprehension shaped the entire course of the re-hearing, with the Petitioners’ arguments consistently falling outside the established jurisdiction.

Analysis of Petitioners’ Key Arguments

The Petitioners’ attempts to demonstrate procedural error focused on three primary claims, none of which were substantiated by the record.

1. Argument: Improper Rejection of Evidence

The Petitioners contended that the original ALJ either rejected or failed to consider their evidence.

Claim: Missing Exhibit Copies: Ms. Finch argued that her evidence must have been rejected because when she requested copies of all hearing exhibits from the OAH, she received only the Respondent’s exhibits. She believed this implied her own evidence was not part of the record used for the decision.

Finding: This claim was incorrect. The ALJ noted that the initial decision explicitly stated that Petitioners’ exhibits had been admitted into evidence. Furthermore, the act of a staff member not returning copies of a party’s own documents is an administrative process issue, not a judicial act of rejecting evidence during a hearing.

Claim: Blocked Line of Questioning: Ms. Finch asserted that the original ALJ prevented her from presenting evidence when he stopped her from questioning a witness about whether the Respondent had a “court order” to apply payments in a certain way.

Finding: Examination of the self-prepared transcript provided by Ms. Finch revealed that the original judge did not reject evidence. Instead, he guided the pro se litigant by stating the question was “sort of asking for a legal conclusion” and advised her, “If you’d like to make that argument, you are welcome to do that.” This constitutes judicial management of a hearing, not the rejection of evidence. The Respondent’s counsel confirmed that Ms. Finch did, in fact, make this argument during her closing statement in the original hearing.

2. Argument: Use of an Improper Statute (A.R.S. § 33-1807)

In their Dispute Petition, the Petitioners alleged that the version of Arizona Revised Statute § 33-1807 used by the original ALJ was “unsubstantiated,” not authentic, and different from the version they had submitted.

Claim: The ALJ based his decision on a “counterfeit” or incorrect version of the law provided by the Respondent.

Finding: Respondent’s attorney, B. Austin Baillio, provided a clear explanation. The statute in question was amended by the legislature in 2024. The version his client submitted was the version that was legally in effect at the time the disputed payment actions occurred (beginning in 2019). He stated: “The version that my client admitted was the version of that statute that was in effect at the time payments were being applied to the ledger, which was a previous version than what exists today.” He further argued that even if it were an error, it was harmless, as the outcome would have been the same under either version of the law. The ALJ had both versions in the record and could apply the law accordingly.

3. Argument: Procedural Unfairness and Lack of Time

Ms. Finch repeatedly stated that she was not given enough time by the ADRE to prepare her “statement in response to the decision” and that her request for an extension was improperly handled.

Claim: The ADRE did not provide an adequate extension, hindering her ability to fully articulate her case for a re-hearing.

Finding: ALJ Abramsohn explained the jurisdictional separation between the agencies: “I can’t do anything about [that] because I’m not real estate. We’re a separate state agency.” The OAH is responsible only for conducting the hearing as scheduled by the ADRE. Any grievance regarding timelines or extensions granted by the Department must be addressed with that department, as it falls outside the OAH’s authority. The final decision noted that the Petitioners contacted the Department on May 9, 2025, but the case had already been forwarded to the OAH on April 25, 2025.

Final Disposition and Legal Conclusions

The ALJ Decision issued on July 3, 2025, formally dismissed the Petitioners’ case, finding that they failed to meet their legal burden.

Final Order: “IT IS ORDERED that Petitioners’ Dispute Petition is Dismissed.”

Conclusions of Law

The decision was based on the following legal conclusions:

1. Burden of Proof: The Petitioners bore the burden to prove by a “preponderance of the evidence” that a procedural or legal error occurred during the February 7, 2025, proceeding. They failed to meet this burden.

2. No Evidence of Rejection: The re-hearing evidence demonstrated that the Petitioners’ submitted documents were, in fact, admitted to the original administrative hearing record.

3. No Evidence of Error: The Petitioners failed to present any credible evidence that they were prevented from presenting evidence or that any errors of law occurred during the original hearing.

4. Improper Arguments: The Petitioners’ arguments disagreeing with the original ALJ’s Findings of Fact and Decision were improperly raised in the re-hearing, as the ADRE had not granted a re-hearing on those grounds. These arguments were consequently dismissed.

Finch v. Mountain Gate Community: A Case Study Guide

Short-Answer Quiz

Instructions: Answer the following questions in two to three complete sentences, drawing exclusively from the information provided in the case documents.

1. Identify the four primary issues raised by Millard and Samantha Finch in their initial petition to the Arizona Department of Real Estate.

2. What was the Respondent’s central argument for why the Finches’ account was consistently marked as delinquent, even when they made monthly payments?

3. Explain the legal distinction made by the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) between the “15.00LateCharge”andthe”30.00 Late Notice Fee.”

4. According to the hearing evidence, what was the specific function of the “20.00RebillFee”andthe”30.00 Late Notice Fee,” and who ultimately bore the cost?

5. What specific event in November 2022 exacerbated the delinquency issue on the Petitioners’ account, and what was the result from January 2023 to February 2025?

6. On what grounds did the ALJ in the initial decision dismiss the Petitioners’ fourth complaint regarding threats of foreclosure and legal action?

7. What was the sole, limited ground on which the Department of Real Estate granted the Petitioners a rehearing?

8. During the rehearing, what was the Respondent’s explanation for why the version of A.R.S. § 33-1807 they submitted differed from the current version of the statute?

9. According to the second ALJ’s decision, why were the Petitioners’ arguments about disagreeing with the first decision’s findings of fact improperly raised at the rehearing?

10. What was the final outcome of the rehearing, and what does the final order state about the binding nature of the decision?

——————————————————————————–

Answer Key

1. The four issues were: (1) levying a $45.00 charge on an account that was paid on time; (2) the $45.00 charge exceeding the statutory limit of $15.00 for a late fee; (3) the 20/30 “late notice fees” being monetary penalties imposed without proper notice; and (4) improper threats of foreclosure and legal action when the account was not delinquent.

2. The Respondent argued that the Finches had fallen behind on their April 2020 assessment. Pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1807(K), all subsequent payments were correctly applied first to the oldest unpaid assessments. This created a rolling delinquency where each new payment covered the previous month’s balance, causing the current month’s assessment to become late.

3. The ALJ determined that the “15.00LateCharge”wasafeeforthelatepaymentofanassessment,limitedbyA.R.S.§33−1803.The”30.00 Late Notice Fee,” however, was found to be a collection cost incurred by the Association for services provided by its managing agent (FSR) and was not subject to the statutory limit for late fees.

4. The “20.00RebillFee”and”30.00 Late Notice Fee” were charges for collection services provided by the managing agent, First Service Residential (FSR). An FSR employee would review overdue accounts and send collection notices, and FSR charged the Association for this service, a cost which was then directly passed on to the homeowner.

5. In November 2022, the Petitioners attempted to prepay their December assessment, but because the charge had not yet been posted and they did not communicate their intent, the payment was applied to past due amounts. This led them to believe they were current, resulting in their payments from January 2023 through February 2025 being consistently late and incurring a Late Charge and Late Notice Fee every month.

6. The ALJ dismissed the fourth complaint because it was unclear, did not allege actionable conduct, and was not supported by evidence. The Respondent’s witnesses testified that no legal action was ever taken, and the Petitioners submitted no evidence to support the allegation that threats were made.

7. The Department of Real Estate granted the rehearing on the single, specific ground of “Error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors occurring during the proceeding.” It did not grant a rehearing based on the Petitioners’ claims that the decision was arbitrary, capricious, or not supported by evidence.

8. The Respondent’s attorney explained that the version of A.R.S. § 33-1807 they submitted was the version in effect at the time the payment actions in question occurred. The statute had been amended in 2024, and those changes were prospective, not applicable to past events.

9. The second ALJ found these arguments were improperly raised because the Department had explicitly not granted a rehearing on the basis of disagreeing with the first decision. The scope of the rehearing was strictly limited to procedural errors, such as the wrongful admission or rejection of evidence during the hearing itself, not a re-evaluation of the facts or the judge’s conclusions.

10. The final outcome was that the Petitioners’ Dispute Petition was dismissed, and the original decision deeming the Respondent the prevailing party was upheld. The final order states that the decision is binding on the parties and any appeal must be filed with the superior court within thirty-five days.

——————————————————————————–

Essay Questions

Instructions: The following questions are designed for deeper analysis of the case. Formulate a comprehensive response based solely on the facts, legal arguments, and procedural history presented in the source documents.

1. Analyze the legal distinction between a “late fee,” a “monetary penalty,” and a “collection cost” as presented in this case. How did the classification of the “$30.00 Late Notice Fee” as a collection cost become the pivotal factor in the dismissal of Petitioners’ Issues 2 and 3?

2. Trace the procedural journey of the Finches’ complaint from the initial petition to the final decision after the rehearing. What does this process reveal about the specific and limited grounds for a rehearing in this administrative context, and how did the Petitioners’ misunderstanding of this scope affect their arguments?

3. Examine the role and application of A.R.S. § 33-1807(K) regarding the allocation of payments. Explain how the Respondent’s adherence to this statute created a “domino effect” of delinquency that the Petitioners failed to understand, leading to the core conflict.

4. Discuss the concept of “burden of proof” in this case. For each of the four initial complaints, explain why the Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Petitioners “failed to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence” that a violation occurred.

5. Based on the transcript of the rehearing and the final ALJ decision, describe the fundamental disagreement between Samantha Finch’s perception of the legal process and ALJ Kay Abramsohn’s explanation of it. What specific examples illustrate the difference between disagreeing with a decision’s outcome versus identifying a procedural error during a hearing?

——————————————————————————–

Glossary of Key Terms

Definition

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)

An independent judge who presides over administrative hearings. In this case, Samuel Fox presided over the initial hearing and Kay A. Abramsohn presided over the rehearing.

A.R.S. § 33-1242(A)(11)

Arizona Revised Statute cited by Petitioners, which allows an association board to impose reasonable monetary penalties on members for violations, but only after providing notice and an opportunity to be heard.

A.R.S. § 33-1803(A) & (B)

Arizona Revised Statutes governing charges for late payment of assessments. It limits late charges to the greater of $15 or 10% of the unpaid assessment and requires notice before imposition. It distinguishes these charges from monetary penalties.

A.R.S. § 33-1807(A) & (K)

Arizona Revised Statutes governing assessment liens. Subsection (A) specifies conditions for foreclosing a lien, requiring delinquency of one year or $1,200. Subsection (K) dictates the order for applying payments, requiring they first be applied to unpaid assessments and related costs before other fees or penalties.

Burden of Proof

The obligation of a party in a trial to produce evidence that proves the claims they have made. In this case, the Petitioners bore the burden of proof to establish their claims by a preponderance of the evidence.

Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions. These are the governing legal documents that set up the rules for a planned community. Several sections, including 6.1.1, 6.9, 6.10.1, and 6.10.5, were cited in the case.

ClickPay

The online portal used by Petitioners to make assessment payments. The portal included a notice that payments should be scheduled on or after the 1st of each billing cycle.

Collection Fees / Costs

Charges incurred by the Association in the process of collecting delinquent assessments. In this case, the “20.00RebillFee”and”30.00 Late Notice Fee” were identified as collection costs passed on from FSR to the homeowner.

First Service Residential (FSR)

The managing agent employed by the Respondent to perform duties such as collecting assessments and providing collection services for overdue accounts.

Late Charge

A specific charge, limited by statute to $15.00, for the late payment of an assessment. This was deemed distinct from a collection fee or monetary penalty.

Late Notice Fee

A $30.00 fee charged to the Finches’ account. The ALJ determined this was a collection cost charged by FSR for sending overdue-payment paperwork, not a late fee subject to the $15 statutory limit.

Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)

An independent state agency in Arizona where administrative hearings are conducted.

Petitioners

Millard C. and Samantha Finch, who owned a home in the Mountain Gate Community and filed the petition against the association.

Preponderance of the Evidence

The evidentiary standard required for the Petitioners to win their case. It is defined as proof that convinces the trier of fact that a contention is “more probably true than not.”

Rebill Fee

A $20.00 fee charged to the Finches’ account. Like the Late Notice Fee, this was identified as a charge for collection services provided by FSR.

Respondent

Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch, the planned community association (HOA) of which the Finches were members.

Tribunal

A term used in the final decision to refer to the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH).

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The case involves Millard C. and Samantha Finch (Petitioners), members of the Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch (Respondent), disputing alleged violations of Planned Community Statutes and community documents regarding assessment charges and collection practices1…. The matter proceeded through the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)45.

Key Facts and Main Issues (Initial Hearing – February 7, 2025)

Petitioners raised four main issues, focusing primarily on the imposition of a $45.00 charge for delinquent assessments, which consisted of a $15.00 late charge and a $30.00 “late notice fee” or “Rebill Fee”3…. Petitioners argued that this $45.00 sum exceeded the statutory limit for late charges—the greater of $15.00 or 10% of the unpaid assessment, as stipulated in A.R.S. § 33-1803(A) and the CC&Rs6…. They also challenged the imposition of fees when they believed their payments were timely, resulting from the HOA applying payments to previously delinquent balances in accordance with A.R.S. § 33-1807(K)1112. Finally, they challenged the legitimacy of the “late notice fees” as impermissible penalties imposed without proper notice and alleged inappropriate threats of foreclosure1314.

Legal Points and Initial Outcome

The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Samuel Fox found that Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof on all four issues12…. The crucial legal distinction was that the $30.00 “Late Notice Fee” and “Rebill Fee” were determined to be collection fees, which are legally separate from, and permissible in addition to, the $15.00 statutory late charge15…. Collection fees and costs are contemplated under A.R.S. § 33-1807(K) and the CC&Rs1719. The ALJ determined that the Respondent (HOA) and its manager correctly applied payments first to delinquent assessments, causing subsequent monthly fees, as mandated by A.R.S. § 33-1807(K)1112. Regarding foreclosure threats, no evidence was entered to support the allegation, and Respondent’s witness testified that no foreclosure efforts had been made2021. The Respondent was deemed the prevailing party in the initial matter16.

Rehearing Proceedings (June 13, 2025)

Petitioners filed a request for rehearing, which the Department of Real Estate granted on the limited issue of “Error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors occurring during the proceeding”2223. The Department explicitly denied rehearing based on disagreement with the factual findings or the underlying decision2425.

At the rehearing, conducted by ALJ Kay A. Abramsohn, Petitioners primarily argued that the previous ALJ had relied on an unsubstantiated or incorrect version of A.R.S. § 33-1807 and that their evidence was not properly considered2627. The Respondent noted that the statute version used was the one legally in effect at the time of the actions (prior to a 2024 amendment), and its application was harmless to the outcome28…. Petitioners repeatedly sought to re-argue their disagreement with the initial factual findings and decision, but were reminded by the ALJ that the scope was restricted to procedural errors during the original hearing31….

Final Decision (Rehearing)

The ALJ concluded that Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof that any error occurred in the administration or rejection of evidence, or any error of law, during the initial February 7, 2025 hearing34. The rehearing evidence confirmed that Petitioners’ exhibits were, in fact, admitted to the record and that the statutes relied upon were contained within the record34. Arguments concerning disagreement with the initial ALJ’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law were dismissed as improperly raised under the limited scope of the granted rehearing33. The ALJ Dismissed Petitioners’ Dispute Petition35.

{ “case”: { “agency”: “ADRE”, “tribunal”: “OAH”, “docket_no”: “25F-H017-REL”, “case_title”: “Millard C. and Samantha Finch Petitioners, v. Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch, Respondent.”, “decision_date”: “2025-07-03”, “alj_name”: “Kay A. Abramsohn” }, “parties”: [ { “party_id”: “P1”, “role”: “petitioner”, “name”: “Millard C. and Samantha Finch”, “party_type”: “homeowner”, “email”: “[email protected]”, “phone”: null, “attorney_name”: null, “attorney_firm”: null, “attorney_email”: null, “attorney_phone”: null }, { “party_id”: “R1”, “role”: “respondent”, “name”: “Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch”, “party_type”: “HOA”, “email”: null, “phone”: null, “attorney_name”: “B. Austin Baillio”, “attorney_firm”: “Maxwell & Morgan, P.C.”, “attorney_email”: “[email protected]”, “attorney_phone”: null } ], “issues”: [ { “issue_id”: “ISS-001”, “type”: “statute”, “citation”: “A.R.S. § 33-1803(B); Association Rules and Design Guidelines, Article 5.2, Article 6.10.5, and Article 6.9”, “caption”: “Charging a 45.00fee(15.00 late charge + $30.00 ‘late notice fee’) when assessment is paid before or on the due date1.”, “violation(s)”: “ARS 33-1803(B); Association Rules and Design Guidelines, Article 5.2, Article 6.10.5, and Article 6.9”, “summary”: “Petitioners argued that payments were charged as late despite being timely, but the ALJ found payments were correctly applied to previous delinquent balances per A.R.S. § 33-1807(K)2….”, “outcome”: “respondent_win”, “filing_fee_paid”: 500.0, “filing_fee_refunded”: false, “civil_penalty_amount”: 0.0, “orders_summary”: “Respondent deemed the prevailing party on this issue5.”, “why_the_loss”: “Petitioners failed to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent charged Late Charges for payments that were not late4.”, “cited”: [“3”, “13”, “33”, “36”] }, { “issue_id”: “ISS-002”, “type”: “statute”, “citation”: “A.R.S. § 33-1803(A); CC&R Article 6, Section 6.10.1”, “caption”: “The $45.00 charge exceeds the statutory limit of 15.00fordelinquentassessments6$.”,
“violation(s)”: “ARS 33-1803(A); CC&R Article 6, Section 6.10.1”,
“summary”: “Petitioners argued the total fee exceeded the statutory late charge limit, but the ALJ found the additional fees ($30 ‘late notice fee’) were permissible collection costs, distinct from late fees78.”, “outcome”: “respondent_win”, “filing_fee_paid”: 500.0, “filing_fee_refunded”: false, “civil_penalty_amount”: 0.0, “orders_summary”: “Respondent deemed the prevailing party on this issue5.”, “why_the_loss”: “Petitioners failed to demonstrate that the Late Notice Fee or Rebill Fee were late fees limited under A.R.S. § 33-1803(A)8.”, “cited”: [“4”, “12”, “37”, “42”] }, { “issue_id”: “ISS-003”, “type”: “statute”, “citation”: “A.R.S. §§ 33-1803(B), 33-1242(A)(11); Association Rules and Design Guidelines”, “caption”: “30.00/20.00 “late notice fees” levied against the account without providing notice, violating statutes regarding monetary penalties9.”, “violation(s)”: “ARS §33-1803(B), ARS §33-1242(A)(11), Association Rules and Design Guidelines”, “summary”: “Petitioners alleged collection fees were impermissible penalties imposed without notice and hearing, but the ALJ determined they were collection costs, distinct from monetary penalties per A.R.S. § 33-1807(K)1011.”, “outcome”: “respondent_win”, “filing_fee_paid”: 500.0, “filing_fee_refunded”: false, “civil_penalty_amount”: 0.0, “orders_summary”: “Respondent deemed the prevailing party on this issue5.”, “why_the_loss”: “Petitioners failed to meet their burden that Respondent impermissibly applied monetary penalties, as the fees were collection fees1011.”, “cited”: [“5”, “13”, “16”, “44”] }, { “issue_id”: “ISS-004”, “type”: “statute”, “citation”: “A.R.S. § 33-1807(A); CC&Rs Article 6, Section 6.10.5(ii), 6.10.5(i), and 6.10.2”, “caption”: “Pre-legal team threatening foreclosure and legal action when Petitioners are not delinquent12.”, “violation(s)”: “ARS 33-1807(A); CC&Rs Article 6, Section 6.10.5(ii), 6.10.5(i), and 6.10.2”, “summary”: “Petitioners challenged Respondent’s authority to threaten legal action without proven delinquency. The ALJ found no evidence of foreclosure threats and deemed the complaint unclear or not ripe5….”, “outcome”: “respondent_win”, “filing_fee_paid”: 500.0, “filing_fee_refunded”: false, “civil_penalty_amount”: 0.0, “orders_summary”: “Respondent deemed the prevailing party in this matter regarding Petition Issue 45.”, “why_the_loss”: “The complaint either did not allege actionable conduct or was not yet ripe for resolution, and Petitioners failed to submit evidence of threats or meet their burden5….”, “cited”: [“6”, “14”, “47”] } ], “money_summary”: { “issues_count”: 4, “total_filing_fees_paid”: 2000.0, “total_filing_fees_refunded”: 0.0, “total_civil_penalties”: 0.0 }, “outcomes”: { “petitioner_is_hoa”: false, “petitioner_win”: “none”, “summarize_judgement”: “The Administrative Law Judge Decision in the underlying matter (25F-H017-REL), which found Respondent the prevailing party on all four petition issues, stands, as Petitioners’ Dispute Petition for Rehearing was dismissed5…. Petitioners failed to meet the burden of proof that there was error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors occurring during the initial proceeding1718.”, “why_the_loss”: “Petitioners failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated applicable statutes, CC&Rs, and/or Bylaws in the underlying dispute4…. Subsequently, Petitioners failed to meet the burden during rehearing to demonstrate error in the initial administrative proceeding17.” }, “analytics”: { “cited”: [ “A.R.S. § 33-1803(A)”, “A.R.S. § 33-1803(B)”, “A.R.S. § 33-1242(A)(11)”, “A.R.S. § 33-1807(A)”, “A.R.S. § 33-1807(K)”, “A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(B)”, “A.R.S. § 32-2199.04” ], “tags”: [ “HOA dispute”, “late fees”, “collection costs”, “assessment payment application”, “rehearing dismissal”, “A.R.S. Title 33 Chapter 16” ] } }

{
“rehearing”: {
“is_rehearing”: true,
“base_case_id”: “25F-H017-REL”,
“original_decision_status”: “affirmed”,
“original_decision_summary”: “The original decision (25F-H017-REL) found the Respondent (Mountain Gate Community) to be the prevailing party on all four petition issues related to late fees, collection costs, the proper application of assessment payments under A.R.S. § 33-1807(K), and threats of legal action [1], [2]. The ALJ found Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof on all claims [3], [4], [5], [1].”,
“rehearing_decision_summary”: “The Department granted the rehearing on the limited ground of: ‘Error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors occurring during the proceeding’ [6], [7]. The rehearing ALJ found that Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof to show such errors occurred during the original hearing [8], [9]. The Petitioners’ Dispute Petition was dismissed, affirming the underlying findings and conclusions of the original decision [10], [11].”,
“issues_challenged”: [
{
“issue”: “Issue 1: Charging a $45.00 fee ($15.00 late charge + $30.00 ‘late notice fee’) when assessment is paid before or on the due date.”,
“challenge_status”: “Affirmed (Petitioner failed to prove procedural/evidentiary error)”
},
{
“issue”: “Issue 2: The $45.00 charge exceeds the statutory limit of $15.00 for delinquent assessments.”,
“challenge_status”: “Affirmed (Petitioner failed to prove procedural/evidentiary error)”
},
{
“issue”: “Issue 3: $30.00/$20.00 “late notice fees” levied against the account without providing notice, violating statutes regarding monetary penalties.”,
“challenge_status”: “Affirmed (Petitioner failed to prove procedural/evidentiary error)”
},
{
“issue”: “Issue 4: Pre-legal team threatening foreclosure and legal action when Petitioners are not delinquent.”,
“challenge_status”: “Affirmed (Petitioner failed to prove procedural/evidentiary error)”
}
]
}
}

{
“case”: {
“docket_no”: “25F-H017-REL-RHG”,
“case_title”: “Samantha and Millard C. Finch, Petitioners, v. Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch, Respondent.”,
“decision_date”: “2025-07-03”,
“tribunal”: “OAH”,
“agency”: “ADRE”
},
“individuals”: [
{
“name”: “Samantha Finch”,
“role”: “petitioner”,
“side”: “petitioner”,
“affiliation”: null,
“notes”: null
},
{
“name”: “Millard C. Finch”,
“role”: “petitioner”,
“side”: “petitioner”,
“affiliation”: null,
“notes”: null
},
{
“name”: “B. Austin Baillio”,
“role”: “HOA attorney”,
“side”: “respondent”,
“affiliation”: “Maxwell & Morgan, P.C.”,
“notes”: null
},
{
“name”: “Samuel Fox”,
“role”: “ALJ”,
“side”: “neutral”,
“affiliation”: “OAH”,
“notes”: “Presided over initial hearing (25F-H017-REL)”
},
{
“name”: “Kay A. Abramsohn”,
“role”: “ALJ”,
“side”: “neutral”,
“affiliation”: “OAH”,
“notes”: “Presided over rehearing (25F-H017-REL-RHG)”
},
{
“name”: “Jonathan Sweat”,
“role”: “witness (former community manager)”,
“side”: “respondent”,
“affiliation”: “First Service Residential”,
“notes”: “Testified for Respondent”
},
{
“name”: “Melinda Montoya”,
“role”: “witness (accounts receivable manager)”,
“side”: “respondent”,
“affiliation”: “First Service Residential”,
“notes”: “Testified for Respondent”
},
{
“name”: “Susan Nicolson”,
“role”: “ADRE Commissioner”,
“side”: “neutral”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: null
},
{
“name”: “vnunez”,
“role”: “ADRE staff”,
“side”: “unknown”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: “Listed as recipient of decisions”
},
{
“name”: “djones”,
“role”: “ADRE staff”,
“side”: “unknown”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: “Listed as recipient of decisions”
},
{
“name”: “labril”,
“role”: “ADRE staff”,
“side”: “unknown”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: “Listed as recipient of decisions”
},
{
“name”: “mneat”,
“role”: “ADRE staff”,
“side”: “unknown”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: “Listed as recipient of decisions”
},
{
“name”: “lrecchia”,
“role”: “ADRE staff”,
“side”: “unknown”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: “Listed as recipient of decisions”
},
{
“name”: “gosborn”,
“role”: “ADRE staff”,
“side”: “unknown”,
“affiliation”: “ADRE”,
“notes”: “Listed as recipient of decisions”
}
]
}

This summary details the proceedings and decisions of the underlying legal dispute and the subsequent administrative rehearing concerning alleged violations of planned community statutes and governing documents.

——————————————————————————–

Case Title: 25F-H017-REL (Original Decision)

Parties: Millard C. and Samantha Finch (Petitioners) versus Mountain Gate Community aka Copper Canyon Ranch (Respondent)1. Hearing Date: February 7, 20251. Key Facts: The Petitioners, homeowners in the community, became involved in a dispute over late assessment payments2. The core issue stemmed from payments applied according to A.R.S. § 33-1807(K), which dictates that payments received must be applied first to delinquent assessments, then to collection fees, and then to other amounts3,4. An attempt by Petitioners to pre-pay the December 2022 assessment was unsuccessful and the payment was applied to past due amounts, leading to a continuous cycle of late charges and collection fees through February 20255,6.

Main Issues (Original Case): Petitioners raised four complaints, primarily alleging that Respondent violated law and community documents by:

1. Levying a **45.00charge∗∗(15.00 late charge plus $30.00 “late notice fee”) when assessments were allegedly paid on time7.

2. Levying a total charge ($45.00) that exceeded the statutory $15.00 limit for late payment charges set by A.R.S. § 33-1803(A) and CC&R 6.10.18,9.

3. Imposing 30.00/20.00 “late notice fees” (Rebill Fees) without proper notice, treating them as penalties10,11.

4. Threatening foreclosure and legal action without proper cause12,13.

Outcome and Key Legal Points (Original Case): The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ Samuel Fox) ordered that the Respondent was the prevailing party regarding all four Petition Issues14,15.

• The ALJ found that Respondent correctly applied payments to delinquent assessments first, pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1807(K), and that Petitioners failed to prove the charges were levied against timely payments4,16.

• Crucially, the ALJ determined that the $30.00 “Late Notice Fee” or “Rebill Fee” was a collection cost, not a “late charge” restricted by the $15.00 limit in A.R.S. § 33-1803(A)17,11. A.R.S. § 33-1807(K) differentiates between collection fees/costs and monetary penalties/late charges, allowing for the application of collection costs incurred by the association3,18.

——————————————————————————–

Case Title: 25F-H017-REL-RHG (Rehearing)

Procedural History: This matter constitutes a rehearing (RHG), granted by the Arizona Department of Real Estate (DRE) following Petitioners’ timely request19,20. Rehearing Date: June 13, 202521. Scope of Rehearing: The DRE limited the sole issue for rehearing to: “Error in the administration or rejection of evidence or other errors occurring during the proceeding” of the original hearing22,23,24. The DRE explicitly denied rehearing requests based on disagreement with the original findings of fact or the overall decision (e.g., that the decision was arbitrary or unsupported by evidence)25,26.

Key Arguments (Rehearing): Petitioners (represented by Samantha Finch) argued that:

• The original ALJ erred by using an “unsubstantiated” version of A.R.S. § 33-1807, suggesting that their version, which they believed was the proper law, would have changed the outcome27,28.

• The original ALJ rejected or failed to consider their evidence, evidenced partially by the fact they did not receive copies of their own exhibits after the decision29.

• The original ALJ improperly prevented them from questioning a witness about the need for a “court order” regarding payment application, ruling the question sought a legal conclusion30,31.

Outcome and Key Legal Points (Rehearing): The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ Kay A. Abramsohn) concluded that Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof regarding any alleged error within the limited scope of the rehearing32,33.

• The rehearing evidence confirmed that Petitioners’ documents were admitted to the record of the original hearing33.

• The ALJ found no evidence that Petitioners were prevented from presenting any evidence during the February 7, 2025 hearing34.

• The ALJ dismissed Petitioners’ repeated arguments concerning their disagreement with the original findings of fact and conclusions of law because those issues were improperly raised and outside the limited scope of the granted rehearing26.

Final Decision: The Tribunal Dismissed Petitioners’ Dispute Petition35. This order is binding, and any subsequent appeal must be filed with the superior court35.

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Millard C. Finch (Petitioner)
    Homeowner
  • Samantha Finch (Petitioner)
    Homeowner and witness

Respondent Side

  • B. Austin Baillio (Attorney)
    Maxwell & Morgan, P.C.
    Legal counsel for respondent
  • Jonathan Sweat (Witness)
    First Service Residential
    Former Community Manager
  • Melinda Montoya (Witness)
    First Service Residential
    Accounts Receivable Manager

Neutral Parties

  • Samuel Fox (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presided over original hearing
  • Kay A. Abramsohn (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Presided over the re-hearing
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Deatta M. Pleasants v. Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc.

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H021-REL
Agency
Tribunal
Decision Date 2025-02-20
Administrative Law Judge SJV
Outcome Dismissed
Filing Fees Refunded
Civil Penalties

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Deatta M. Pleasants Counsel
Respondent Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc. Counsel David Onuschak, Esq. (Jones, Skelton & Hochuli, PLC)

Alleged Violations

No violations listed

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

25F-H021-REL Decision – 1252432.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:14 (52.5 KB)

25F-H021-REL Decision – 1275219.pdf

Uploaded 2026-04-24T12:36:20 (128.4 KB)

Briefing Document: Pleasants v. Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc.

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the administrative hearing and final decision in the matter of Deatta M. Pleasants versus the Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc. (HOA). The core of the dispute centered on Ms. Pleasants’ allegation that the HOA violated community CC&Rs by failing to repair a common area culvert, which she claimed caused her property (Lot 185) to flood during a severe storm in July 2021.

The Respondent HOA countered that the drainage system was constructed in accordance with plans approved by Navajo County in the 1980s and has been properly maintained. The defense’s central arguments were that the July 2021 storm was a “100-year storm,” a weather event that exceeded the system’s “50-year storm” design capacity, and that Ms. Pleasants’ lot is situated within a FEMA-designated regulatory floodway, where flooding during such an event is an expected occurrence.

Expert testimony from Dr. Zachary Barlo, a licensed civil engineer retained by the HOA, was pivotal. Dr. Barlo concluded that the drainage system was constructed in “general substantial conformance” with the original plans, is adequately maintained, and functions as designed. He testified that the feature Ms. Pleasants believed to be a disconnected culvert was, in fact, a roadway hatch pattern on the design plans. Crucially, he affirmed that flooding on Lot 185 would be expected during a major storm event due to its location in the floodway, regardless of culvert improvements.

The Administrative Law Judge ultimately dismissed Ms. Pleasants’ petition. The final decision held that the Petitioner failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the HOA had violated the CC&Rs. The ruling affirmed that the HOA had maintained the system and that the flooding was a predictable consequence of an exceptionally severe storm impacting a property located in a high-risk flood zone.

1. Case Overview

Case Number: 25F-H021-REL

Petitioner: Deatta M. Pleasants, owner of Lot 185

Respondent: Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc.

Jurisdiction: Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH), Phoenix, Arizona

Presiding Judge: Administrative Law Judge Sondra J. Vanella

Hearing Date: February 4, 2025

Decision Date: February 20, 2025

2. Petitioner’s Allegation and Testimony

Core Claim

The Petitioner, Deatta M. Pleasants, alleged that the Respondent violated Article II, Section I of the revised 2022 CC&Rs. This section assigns the HOA the “full power and duty to maintain, repair and make necessary improvements in the COMMON AREA,” including underground culverts. The petition asserted, “The association will not repair the culvert (common area) to allow the ditch to drain.”

Central Arguments and Evidence

The July 2021 Storm: The complaint originated from a single, severe storm in July 2021, which caused significant flooding on Petitioner’s property, Lot 185. Ms. Pleasants testified that while the storm was severe, she believes subsequent flooding was due to a malfunctioning drainage system, not the storm’s magnitude alone.

Interpretation of Design Plans: Ms. Pleasants asserted that a double-line feature on the original circa 1986 drainage plans represented a proposed culvert. She believed this culvert was intended to connect a roadside ditch to the main regional drainage infrastructure but was improperly installed or left disconnected, causing a blockage and subsequent overflow.

Observed Conditions: The Petitioner presented photographs from the 2021 storm depicting a 21-foot by 5-foot ditch in front of her property completely full of water and not draining. She argued this demonstrated a functional failure of the system.

Rejection of Floodway Argument: Ms. Pleasants testified that she was “highly disappointed in the engineering report” and that her lot’s location within a FEMA flood plain “has absolutely nothing to do with the functionality and performance of this storm drain channel that is meant to keep from flooding.”

HOA Responsibility: The Petitioner maintained that it is the HOA’s “fiduciary responsibility” to remedy the issue by connecting what she believes to be the main drain.

3. Respondent’s Position and Defense

Core Defense

The Respondent HOA’s position was that it has fulfilled its maintenance obligations under the CC&Rs and that the flooding was an unavoidable result of an extreme weather event impacting a property in a high-risk area.

Key Arguments and Testimony

System Design and Approval: The drainage system was constructed in the mid-1980s based on plans approved by Navajo County. The design standards at the time, and currently, require the system to handle a 50-year storm event.

Storm Severity: The July 2021 storm was characterized as an exceptional event, a “100-year storm,” that produced approximately three inches of rain within hours. This exceeded the design capacity of the drainage infrastructure.

FEMA Floodway Designation: A critical element of the defense was that Lot 185 is located within a FEMA-designated regulatory floodway. Testimony established this as the highest-risk flood category, specifically designated to allow for the unimpeded flow of floodwater.

Maintenance Record: HOA President Sharon Seekins testified that the association periodically inspects and maintains the common area drainage system, including recent improvement projects on the Oklahoma Draw Wash. She noted that under the CC&Rs, individual lot owners are responsible for maintaining the drainage ditches directly in front of their properties.

Lack of Other Complaints: Ms. Seekins testified that no other homeowners filed formal complaints about the drainage system’s performance following the July 2021 storm.

4. Expert Witness Testimony: Dr. Zachary Barlo

Dr. Zachary Barlo, a Senior Civil Engineer with a PhD, was retained by the Respondent to inspect the drainage system and provide an expert opinion. His testimony was a cornerstone of the Respondent’s case.

Credentials and Experience

Position: Senior Engineer at Ironside Engineering Development, Inc.

Education: PhD and Master of Science in Civil Engineering from Oregon State University; undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering from Virginia Tech.

Licensure: Licensed Professional Engineer in the State of Arizona.

Expertise: Extensive experience with drainage systems, Navajo County codes, and FEMA regulations.

Inspection and Analysis

Dr. Barlo conducted two field visits in June and December of 2024. His process involved:

1. Reviewing the original circa 1986 construction and drainage plans.

2. Conducting a visual and physical inspection of the as-built infrastructure near Lot 185, including measuring culverts.

3. Speaking with both Ms. Pleasants and HOA representatives to understand the concerns.

Key Findings and Professional Opinion

Finding Category

Dr. Barlo’s Testimony and Conclusions

Conformance with Plans

The existing infrastructure was found to be in “general substantial conformance with the original plan.” Notably, a 24-inch pipe was installed where an 18-inch pipe was specified, which he described as a “betterment to the design” as it increases the capacity to convey water.

The Disputed “Culvert”

The double-line feature on the plans, which the Petitioner believed was a disconnected culvert, is not a culvert. Dr. Barlo identified it as part of the “hatch pattern of the roadway track.” He supported this by noting the absence of design specifications like invert elevations, which are present on all actual culverts shown in the plans.

System Functionality

The drainage system is designed to handle a 50-year storm. The July 2021 storm was “generally believed” to be larger than a 50-year event. He opined that the Respondent has adequately maintained the drainage system and that it is not in a state of disrepair.

Impact of FEMA Designation

Lot 185’s location in a regulatory floodway is highly significant. Dr. Barlo explained this area is designed for “unimpeded discharge” and is expected to have “deeper discharge depths” during major storms.

Conclusion on Flooding

Dr. Barlo stated definitively: “flooding of the area would be expected in this area in large storm events based on the FEMA designation regardless of the culvert improvements.” He testified that the conditions Ms. Pleasants experienced were what he would expect during a 100-year storm event on that specific lot.

5. Hearing Outcome and Judicial Decision

The Administrative Law Judge’s decision, issued on February 20, 2025, ruled conclusively in favor of the Respondent.

Conclusions of Law

• The Judge found that the Petitioner, who bore the burden of proof, failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the Respondent violated Article II, Section I of the CC&Rs.

• The ruling stated, “The credible evidence of record established that Respondent has maintained the underground culverts that were constructed in accordance with the Navajo County approved plans.”

• It was further established that “the underground culverts are functioning as intended.”

Final Determination

The Judge concluded that the flooding experienced by the Petitioner was a predictable and expected outcome given the circumstances: “Unfortunately, Petitioner’s lot is located in a FEMA Floodway and flooding of the area would be expected in large storm events which is exactly what occurred in July 2021, and has not occurred since.”

IT IS ORDERED that no action is required of Respondent in this matter and that Petitioner’s Petition is dismissed.

Questions

Question

Who is responsible for proving that the HOA violated the CC&Rs during a hearing?

Short Answer

The homeowner (Petitioner) bears the burden of proof.

Detailed Answer

In an administrative hearing regarding an HOA dispute, the burden falls on the homeowner to prove by a 'preponderance of the evidence' that the HOA committed the alleged violation. The HOA does not have to prove they are innocent unless they are establishing an affirmative defense.

Alj Quote

Petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that Respondent committed the alleged violation by a preponderance of the evidence.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2); A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)

Topic Tags

  • Burden of Proof
  • Legal Standards
  • Procedure

Question

Is the HOA responsible for flooding damage caused by an unusually severe storm?

Short Answer

Generally no, if the drainage system was properly maintained and the flooding was due to the severity of the storm and property location.

Detailed Answer

If an HOA maintains its drainage system according to the approved design plans, it is not necessarily liable for flooding caused by extreme weather events (like a 100-year storm) that exceed the system's design capacity, especially if the home is located in a known flood zone.

Alj Quote

Unfortunately, Petitioner’s lot is located in a FEMA Floodway and flooding of the area would be expected in large storm events which is exactly what occurred in July 2021, and has not occurred since.

Legal Basis

Factual Finding / Liability Standards

Topic Tags

  • Flooding
  • Maintenance
  • Liability

Question

Does the HOA have to upgrade old infrastructure to meet modern standards?

Short Answer

The decision implies no, as long as the system is maintained according to the originally approved plans.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ found that the HOA met its obligations by maintaining the system in accordance with the plans approved at the time of construction (late 1980s), which were designed for a '50-year storm,' even if modern severe storms exceed that capacity.

Alj Quote

The credible evidence of record established that Respondent has maintained the underground culverts that were constructed in accordance with the Navajo County approved plans.

Legal Basis

CC&R Interpretation

Topic Tags

  • Maintenance
  • Infrastructure
  • Grandfathering

Question

How much evidence is needed to win a case against the HOA?

Short Answer

A 'preponderance of the evidence,' meaning the claim is more probably true than not.

Detailed Answer

The homeowner must provide evidence that has 'superior evidentiary weight' and is more convincing than the HOA's evidence. It is not about the number of witnesses, but the convincing force of the evidence presented.

Alj Quote

A preponderance of the evidence is such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.

Legal Basis

Morris K. Udall, Arizona Law of Evidence § 5

Topic Tags

  • Evidence
  • Legal Standards

Question

Can I rely on my own interpretation of engineering plans to prove a violation?

Short Answer

Likely not, if the HOA presents conflicting expert testimony.

Detailed Answer

In this case, the homeowner believed a marking on the plan was a missing culvert, but the HOA's expert engineer testified it was a roadway hatch pattern. The ALJ relied on the expert's interpretation over the homeowner's assumption.

Alj Quote

Dr. Barlow testified that Petitioner’s belief that double lines in the red box on the plans are supposed to be a designated culvert, is erroneous, as those lines are part of the roadway designation.

Legal Basis

Expert Testimony

Topic Tags

  • Evidence
  • Expert Witnesses
  • Dispute Resolution

Question

Is a single incident of failure enough to prove the HOA isn't maintaining common areas?

Short Answer

Not necessarily, especially if the incident was caused by exceptional circumstances.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ noted that the petition was based on a single storm event in July 2021 described as 'exceptional and unusually severe,' and there were no other complaints. This isolated incident was insufficient to prove a failure to maintain.

Alj Quote

Ms. Seekins testified (and Petitioner agreed) that the Petition was filed due to an occurrence from a single storm in July 2021, and that there have been no other complaints to the Board regarding the culverts.

Legal Basis

Factual Finding

Topic Tags

  • Maintenance
  • Enforcement
  • Violations

Case

Docket No
25F-H021-REL
Case Title
Deatta M. Pleasants v. Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc.
Decision Date
2025-02-20
Alj Name
Sondra J. Vanella
Tribunal
Office of Administrative Hearings
Agency
Arizona Department of Real Estate

Questions

Question

Who is responsible for proving that the HOA violated the CC&Rs during a hearing?

Short Answer

The homeowner (Petitioner) bears the burden of proof.

Detailed Answer

In an administrative hearing regarding an HOA dispute, the burden falls on the homeowner to prove by a 'preponderance of the evidence' that the HOA committed the alleged violation. The HOA does not have to prove they are innocent unless they are establishing an affirmative defense.

Alj Quote

Petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that Respondent committed the alleged violation by a preponderance of the evidence.

Legal Basis

A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2); A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)

Topic Tags

  • Burden of Proof
  • Legal Standards
  • Procedure

Question

Is the HOA responsible for flooding damage caused by an unusually severe storm?

Short Answer

Generally no, if the drainage system was properly maintained and the flooding was due to the severity of the storm and property location.

Detailed Answer

If an HOA maintains its drainage system according to the approved design plans, it is not necessarily liable for flooding caused by extreme weather events (like a 100-year storm) that exceed the system's design capacity, especially if the home is located in a known flood zone.

Alj Quote

Unfortunately, Petitioner’s lot is located in a FEMA Floodway and flooding of the area would be expected in large storm events which is exactly what occurred in July 2021, and has not occurred since.

Legal Basis

Factual Finding / Liability Standards

Topic Tags

  • Flooding
  • Maintenance
  • Liability

Question

Does the HOA have to upgrade old infrastructure to meet modern standards?

Short Answer

The decision implies no, as long as the system is maintained according to the originally approved plans.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ found that the HOA met its obligations by maintaining the system in accordance with the plans approved at the time of construction (late 1980s), which were designed for a '50-year storm,' even if modern severe storms exceed that capacity.

Alj Quote

The credible evidence of record established that Respondent has maintained the underground culverts that were constructed in accordance with the Navajo County approved plans.

Legal Basis

CC&R Interpretation

Topic Tags

  • Maintenance
  • Infrastructure
  • Grandfathering

Question

How much evidence is needed to win a case against the HOA?

Short Answer

A 'preponderance of the evidence,' meaning the claim is more probably true than not.

Detailed Answer

The homeowner must provide evidence that has 'superior evidentiary weight' and is more convincing than the HOA's evidence. It is not about the number of witnesses, but the convincing force of the evidence presented.

Alj Quote

A preponderance of the evidence is such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.

Legal Basis

Morris K. Udall, Arizona Law of Evidence § 5

Topic Tags

  • Evidence
  • Legal Standards

Question

Can I rely on my own interpretation of engineering plans to prove a violation?

Short Answer

Likely not, if the HOA presents conflicting expert testimony.

Detailed Answer

In this case, the homeowner believed a marking on the plan was a missing culvert, but the HOA's expert engineer testified it was a roadway hatch pattern. The ALJ relied on the expert's interpretation over the homeowner's assumption.

Alj Quote

Dr. Barlow testified that Petitioner’s belief that double lines in the red box on the plans are supposed to be a designated culvert, is erroneous, as those lines are part of the roadway designation.

Legal Basis

Expert Testimony

Topic Tags

  • Evidence
  • Expert Witnesses
  • Dispute Resolution

Question

Is a single incident of failure enough to prove the HOA isn't maintaining common areas?

Short Answer

Not necessarily, especially if the incident was caused by exceptional circumstances.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ noted that the petition was based on a single storm event in July 2021 described as 'exceptional and unusually severe,' and there were no other complaints. This isolated incident was insufficient to prove a failure to maintain.

Alj Quote

Ms. Seekins testified (and Petitioner agreed) that the Petition was filed due to an occurrence from a single storm in July 2021, and that there have been no other complaints to the Board regarding the culverts.

Legal Basis

Factual Finding

Topic Tags

  • Maintenance
  • Enforcement
  • Violations

Case

Docket No
25F-H021-REL
Case Title
Deatta M. Pleasants v. Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc.
Decision Date
2025-02-20
Alj Name
Sondra J. Vanella
Tribunal
Office of Administrative Hearings
Agency
Arizona Department of Real Estate

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Deatta M. Pleasants (Petitioner)
    Owner of lot 185
  • Larry Rice (Co-owner)
    Present with Petitioner; co-owner of the home
  • Daphna Rice (Co-owner)
    Present with Petitioner; co-owner of the home

Respondent Side

  • David Onuschak (Attorney)
    Jones, Skelton & Hochuli, PLC
    Represented Respondent
  • Sharon Seekins (Witness)
    Pinecrest Lake Property Owners Association, Inc.
    Board President
  • Zachary Barlow (Witness)
    Ironside Engineering and Development, Inc.
    Senior Civil Engineer
  • Ryan J. McCarthy (Attorney)
    Jones, Skelton & Hochuli, PLC
    Listed on the order setting hearing

Neutral Parties

  • Sondra J. Vanella (Administrative Law Judge)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate