HOA Collection | FDCPA | Counsel Disqualification | CV2020-092936
The court set aside default, denied later default, and allowed several third-party claims against HOA collection participants to survive pleading motions.
Last updated July 2, 2026. Case: Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Janet DeFine, Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2020-092936.
Scope note: This page covers Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Janet DeFine (Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2020-092936) as a public Arizona superior-court HOA case guide. It is built from 21 filed minute entries, especially the November 20, 2020 default set-aside entry, the July 30, 2021 Maxwell & Morgan ruling, the November 4, 2021 Direct Access ruling, and the December 1, 2021 disqualification ruling. Currency caveat: the collected record ends with the October 6, 2023 order reinstating the case by stipulation after a dismissal-calendar dismissal. Any later settlement performance, judgment, trial setting, or appeal is outside these records. Superior-court rulings bind only the parties and are not precedent. This page is educational and is not legal advice.
The takeaway
An HOA collection case can become procedurally complex after default is set aside and the homeowner asserts counterclaims or third-party claims against collection participants. At the pleading stage here, the court allowed FDCPA, abuse-of-process, and slander-of-title theories against the association’s law firm or vendor to proceed, while also refusing to disqualify the association’s counsel without a stronger showing.
Case Participants
Neutral Parties
- Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association, Inc. (Plaintiff)
Association that brought the collection/default case and later appeared in counterclaim-related proceedings. - Janet DeFine (Defendant / third-party plaintiff)
Homeowner defendant who obtained set-aside of default judgment and asserted third-party claims. - FirstService Residential Arizona LLC (Third-party defendant)
Management company named as a third-party defendant in the expanded litigation. - Maxwell & Morgan, P.C. (Third-party defendant / counsel)
Association collection law firm whose motion to dismiss third-party claims was denied and whose continued representation of the association was challenged. - Direct Access Legal Services (Third-party defendant)
Legal-services vendor whose motion for judgment on the pleadings on abuse of process was denied. - Mark W. Waldron (Counsel)
Counsel listed for the association in the original caption. - Chad M. Gallacher (Counsel)
Counsel who appeared for the association in later proceedings. - Scott B. Humble (Counsel)
Counsel listed for FirstService Residential Arizona LLC. - Haven Lee Dove (Counsel)
Counsel listed for Direct Access Legal Services. - Michael S. DeFine (Counsel)
Counsel listed for Janet DeFine in several entries. - Hon. Rodrick Coffey (Judge)
Judge who issued the third-party pleading and counsel-disqualification rulings.
What happened
Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association filed a collection-related action that initially moved through default proceedings. The commissioner continued the default hearing, denied a Rule 12(b)(6) motion on the record, and held evidentiary proceedings. On November 20, 2020, the court granted the homeowner’s motion to set aside default judgment and ordered a timely answer.
After an answer or responsive pleading was filed, the court denied a later application for default. The litigation then expanded to include counterclaims and third-party claims involving the association, FirstService Residential Arizona, Direct Access Legal Services, and Maxwell & Morgan.
The July 30, 2021 ruling denied Maxwell & Morgan’s motion to dismiss the third-party complaint. The court extended the Rule 4(i) service deadline to the date of actual service, declined to dismiss the FDCPA claim on limitations grounds at the pleading stage, and held that abuse-of-process and slander-of-title theories involved factual issues that could not be resolved on a motion to dismiss.
The November 4, 2021 ruling denied Direct Access Legal Services’ motion for judgment on the pleadings. The court accepted the pleading allegations as true at that stage and concluded that whether the vendor used process for an improper purpose was a factual issue. The court later denied Direct Access’s motion for reconsideration.
The December 1, 2021 ruling denied the homeowner’s motion to disqualify Maxwell & Morgan as counsel for the association. The court noted confusion over whether a counterclaim named the correct association entity, but concluded that the homeowner had not met the burden for disqualification and that disqualification would prejudice the association. The court also noted that because Maxwell & Morgan was itself a party, its lawyers would participate in the case regardless.
The collected record later shows notice of settlement, dismissal without prejudice after the dismissal-calendar deadline passed, and then a stipulated order reinstating the case in October 2023.
Video overview of the ruling
An AI-generated video overview of Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association v. DeFine (CV2020-092936 (Maricopa County Superior Court)). HOA collection case expanded into third-party FDCPA and abuse-of-process claims that survived pleading attacks. This plain-language summary was generated from the court’s filings; the court’s own ruling controls.
Listen: audio deep dive on the ruling
An AI-generated audio deep dive walking through the court’s reasoning and disposition in Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association v. DeFine. Generated from the case filings; verify against the linked ruling below.
Procedural timeline
Complete uploaded source-document index
This index is generated from every public-facing source file currently present in assets/court_case_downloads/silverton-deer-village-homeowners-association-v-define/raw/: 21 PDFs. Files are ordered by the date/sequence embedded in the normalized filename; AI-generated review materials are labeled separately and should not be treated as court filings.
Minute Entry
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Default Judgment
Type: Decision or judgment
Shows the filer trying to move the case forward because the opposing party had not timely appeared.
Oral Argument
Type: Court/source PDF
Continued default-hearing minute entry denying the homeowner’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion on the record and setting an evidentiary hearing.
Oral Argument
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Oral Argument
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Under Advisement Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Evidentiary-hearing minute entry granting the homeowner’s motion to set aside default judgment and ordering a timely answer.
Status Conference
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Minute Entry
Type: Court order/minute entry
Minute entry rescinding an earlier default-related entry and denying default because defendants had filed an answer or responsive pleading.
Minute Entry
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Default Judgment
Type: Decision or judgment
Shows the filer trying to move the case forward because the opposing party had not timely appeared.
Minute Entry
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Minute Entry
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Oral Argument Set
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Oral Argument
Type: Court/source PDF
Oral-argument minute entry granting consolidation of CV2020-092936 and CV2021-090259 for all further proceedings.
Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Ruling denying Maxwell & Morgan’s motion to dismiss third-party claims, including FDCPA, abuse-of-process, and slander-of-title theories, at the pleading stage.
Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Ruling denying Direct Access Legal Services’ motion for judgment on the pleadings because abuse of process presented factual issues not resolvable on the pleadings.
Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Minute entry denying Direct Access Legal Services’ motion for reconsideration of the abuse-of-process pleading ruling.
Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Ruling denying the homeowner’s motion to disqualify Maxwell & Morgan as association counsel, finding the burden for disqualification was not met and disqualification would prejudice the association.
Minute Entry
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Dismissal-calendar order dismissing the matter without prejudice after notice of settlement and no further filing.
Judgment Entered
Type: Decision or judgment
Order adopting the parties’ stipulation to reinstate the case after the prior dismissal-calendar dismissal.
FAQ
Did the association obtain default judgment in the collected record?
The collected entries show that default judgment was set aside on November 20, 2020 and that a later application for default was denied because an answer or responsive pleading had been filed.
Why did the court let the claims against Maxwell & Morgan proceed?
At the pleading stage, the court extended the service deadline, found the FDCPA limitations issue unresolved on the record, and held that abuse of process and slander of title raised factual issues.
What happened to the Direct Access Legal Services motion?
The court denied judgment on the pleadings because the abuse-of-process allegations, if true, could support relief and whether process was misused was a factual issue.
Did the court disqualify Maxwell & Morgan as association counsel?
No. The court held that the homeowner had not met the burden for disqualification and that disqualification would prejudice the association.
Did the case end with a final merits judgment?
No final merits judgment appears in the collected entries. The case was dismissed without prejudice after a settlement notice, then reinstated by stipulated order.
Why is this case classified as standard?
The rulings contain useful collection-litigation and pleading analysis, but they are superior-court, mostly procedural/pleading-stage rulings and do not create precedent.
Case Dossier
This generated dossier mirrors the structured data surfaced on the OAH/ADRE case pages. It is added from the curated court-case record and the custom page source package, while the hand-authored analysis below remains intact.
Case Summary
| Case ID / citation | CV2020-092936 (Maricopa County Superior Court) |
|---|---|
| Court / tribunal | Superior Court |
| Decision / key date | December 1, 2021 |
| Judge / panel | Hon. Steven P. Lynch, Hon. Janice Crawford, Hon. Rodrick Coffey, Hon. Brian D. Kaiser |
| Parties | Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association, Inc. (Plaintiff) v. Janet DeFine (Defendant) |
| Topics | assessmentsforeclosureliensfdcpaprocedure |
| Outcome / holding | The court set aside the default judgment and later denied default after defendants filed an answer or responsive pleading. On the third-party claims, it refused to dismiss claims against Maxwell & Morgan at the pleading stage, including FDCPA limitations, abuse of process, and slander of title theories. It also denied Direct Access Legal Services’ motion for judgment on the pleadings on abuse of process and denied a motion to disqualify Maxwell & Morgan from representing the association. |
| Primary public source | View source opinion/order |
Parties, Court, and Research Coverage
| Uploaded source package | 21 PDFs |
|---|---|
| Step-by-step docket roadmap | 9 roadmap entries |
| Video overview | Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association v. DeFine |
| Study / briefing material | 1 section |
| FAQ / homeowner questions | 6 questions |
| Curated download aliases | 1 download link |
Key Issues & Findings
Silverton Deer Village Homeowners Association pursued default-related relief against a homeowner. The default judgment was set aside, default was later denied after an answer, and the case expanded into counterclaims and third-party claims involving the association, its law firm, its management company, and a legal-services vendor. The court denied Maxwell & Morgan’s motion to dismiss FDCPA, abuse-of-process, and slander-of-title theories, denied Direct Access Legal Services’ motion for judgment on the pleadings on abuse of process, and denied a motion to disqualify Maxwell & Morgan as association counsel.
The early default-related entries show that the court first continued default proceedings, denied a Rule 12(b)(6) motion on the record, held evidentiary proceedings, and then granted the homeowner’s motion to set aside the default judgment while requiring a timely answer. When the court later reviewed another application for default, it denied the application because an answer or responsive pleading had been filed.
The July 2021 Maxwell & Morgan ruling applied Arizona pleading standards and Rule 4(i). Although service occurred more than 90 days after the third-party complaint was filed, the court exercised discretion under Sholem to extend the service deadline to the date of actual service. It declined to dismiss the FDCPA claim on limitations grounds because the pleading record did not establish when the third-party plaintiff knew of the lawsuit or whether alleged events fell within one year. It also held that abuse of process and slander of title involved factual issues that could not be resolved on a motion to dismiss.
The November 2021 Direct Access ruling similarly held that the abuse-of-process claim alleged enough facts to proceed at the pleadings stage. The December 2021 disqualification ruling denied the homeowner’s request to disqualify Maxwell & Morgan as association counsel, reasoning that disqualification of opposing counsel requires sufficient reason, that disqualification would prejudice the association, and that Maxwell & Morgan was itself a party whose lawyers would participate regardless.
This case is useful for HOA collection litigation because it shows several procedural pressure points after a default-driven association case expands into counterclaims and third-party claims against collection counsel, management, and vendors. The rulings are especially useful on pleading-stage survival of FDCPA, abuse-of-process, and slander-of-title theories arising from HOA collection litigation, and on the high burden to disqualify association counsel.