R. L. Whitmer v. Hilton Casitas CV2022-014709: Limits on Enforcing an Old HOA ALJ Order

Arizona HOA Contempt • Administrative Orders • Budget Ratification

CV2022-014709 is the later Whitmer contempt case. The courts treated the 2015 ALJ order as tied to the 2013-2014 budget dispute, not as an indefinite contempt hook for later budget years.

Last updated May 16, 2026. Case: R. L. Whitmer v. Hilton Casitas Homeowners Association, Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2022-014709; Arizona Court of Appeals No. 1 CA-CV 23-0350; Arizona Supreme Court No. CV-24-0047-PR.

Scope note: This page covers a Superior Court contempt petition and a nonprecedential Court of Appeals memorandum decision. It is educational and is not legal advice. AI-generated briefing/audio/video files in the upload were reviewed only as orientation and are not treated as source authority on this page.

The rule in one sentence

A contempt petition based on an administrative HOA order must tie the later conduct to a clear enforceable command; a broad instruction to comply with a statute in the future may be too limited or too vague to support later contempt.

Case snapshot

Case name

R. L. Whitmer v. Hilton Casitas Homeowners Association.

Court and dockets

Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2022-014709; Arizona Court of Appeals No. 1 CA-CV 23-0350.

Core dispute

Whether the 2015 ALJ budget order could support contempt claims over alleged 2021 and 2022 legal-budget overages.

Final outcome

Dismissal affirmed on appeal; later judgment awarded Hilton Casitas $16,506.63 in appellate and trial-level fees/costs.

Why this case matters

This case is the limiting companion to the 2018 published Whitmer decision. The earlier appeal confirmed that Superior Court can enforce a final HOA administrative decision. This later case asks how far an old administrative order reaches.

The Superior Court read the 2015 ALJ order as addressing the specific 2013-2014 budget dispute and anticipated ratification, not as an open-ended command governing every future budget year. The court also stated that if the order were meant to operate indefinitely, it would be too vague to enforce by contempt.

The Court of Appeals affirmed in a 2024 memorandum decision, and the Arizona Supreme Court denied review. The final 2024 judgment awarded fees and costs to Hilton Casitas after the appellate process.

Video overview: enforcing Arizona HOA ALJ orders

Watch this overview for the larger Whitmer/Hilton Casitas enforcement problem. The video explains why Superior Court jurisdiction matters after an OAH win and why later contempt enforcement still depends on a clear order and proof of violation.

What the courts decided

Dismissal of amended petition

The Superior Court granted the associations motion to dismiss the amended contempt petition.

Old ALJ order read narrowly

The court construed the 2015 ALJ decision as focused on the 2013-2014 budget context and an anticipated ratification meeting.

Vagueness problem for contempt

The court stated that if the ALJ intended an indefinite future directive, the order was too vague to enforce by contempt.

Appeal affirmed dismissal

The Court of Appeals affirmed in No. 1 CA-CV 23-0350, and the Supreme Court denied review.

For homeowners: contempt needs a precise order

This later Whitmer case is the limiting companion to the published 2018 enforcement decision. It shows that a homeowner may have a Superior Court forum but still lose if the old administrative order does not clearly command the later conduct at issue.

For homeowners, the practical takeaway is to build the contempt record around the exact order language, the exact later conduct, and why the order clearly applies to that later conduct. A broad instruction to comply with a statute in the future may not be enough.

Suggested contempt-enforcement workflow

  1. Quote the command. Start with the precise words of the administrative order you want enforced.
  2. Identify the later act. State the later budget, assessment, meeting, record, or other conduct alleged to violate that command.
  3. Explain the bridge. Show why the old order clearly applies to the later act instead of only the original dispute.
  4. Anticipate vagueness arguments. If the order is broad or indefinite, explain why contempt is still a proper remedy.

For associations and managers: keep administrative orders narrow and documented

Do this
  • Read old administrative orders in context before assuming they apply to later years.
  • Keep budget, ratification, and assessment records by fiscal year.
  • Document how the association complied with the specific order entered.
  • Address vague or overbroad enforcement demands with the order language and timeline.
Avoid this
  • Do not ignore a final administrative order simply because it is old.
  • Do not treat every later statutory dispute as contempt of an earlier order.
  • Do not rely on generic compliance statements without budget-year records.
  • Do not assume the 2018 jurisdiction ruling guarantees contempt relief.

What this later Whitmer case does not do

This case does not erase the published Whitmer enforcement rule. The Superior Court still had an enforcement forum. The problem was the reach and clarity of the older ALJ order as applied to later 2021 and 2022 budget allegations.

It also does not say future administrative HOA orders can never be enforced. It says contempt requires a clear, specific, enforceable command tied to the alleged violation.

Frequently asked questions

How does this case relate to the 2018 published Whitmer decision?

The 2018 decision confirms jurisdiction to enforce final administrative HOA orders. This later case shows the limits of contempt when the old order does not clearly cover later conduct.

Why did the contempt theory fail?

The courts read the 2015 ALJ order as tied to the original 2013-2014 budget dispute and too limited or vague to support later contempt over 2021 and 2022 allegations.

Does this mean administrative orders are useless?

No. It means enforcement depends on the wording of the order and proof that the later conduct violated a clear command.

Why include fee and mandate documents?

The later fee and appellate documents show the full consequence of the enforcement attempt, not just the dismissal order.

Review note and disclaimer

Reviewed against the Superior Court contempt docket, the Court of Appeals memorandum decision, and the mandate/fee materials. This page is educational information and is not legal advice.

Whitmer / Hilton Casitas case family

These pages separate the three court dockets while keeping the shared administrative-order background visible.

Related pageRole in the case familyConnection
Published 2018 Whitmer caseRelated docketThe earlier published decision confirmed Superior Court jurisdiction to enforce final HOA administrative decisions.
CV2021-050888Related docketRelated statutory budget/audit enforcement case with a fee-award appeal.

Filing roadmap and raw court PDFs (42 documents)

The raw court files have been renamed into stable date-and-title filenames for public download. The roadmap is a filing index, not a legal conclusion about every filing.

Primary sources

Core source documents used for this page.

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