Arizona HOA Bylaws & Quorum | A.R.S. §§ 10-3722, 10-11023 | CV2008-029900
Gayer is a practical, non-precedential illustration of a member challenging an Arizona nonprofit community association’s bylaw-amendment election for lack of statutory quorum and improper meeting notice. The court dismissed the claims against the association president individually but let the quorum claim against the association proceed past the pleading stage; the plaintiff then voluntarily dismissed the case.
Last updated June 19, 2026. Case: Richard Gayer v. Willo Neighborhood Association, Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2008-029900 (Hon. A. Craig Blakey II).
Scope note: This is a trial-level matter that ended on the plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal without prejudice, so it set no binding precedent. This page summarizes the pleadings and the court’s motion-to-dismiss ruling from the uploaded record and is educational, not legal advice.
The takeaway
On a motion to dismiss, a member’s allegation that a bylaw-amendment election lacked the statutory quorum and was held at an improperly noticed meeting (A.R.S. §§ 10-3722 and 10-11023(A)) was legally sufficient to proceed against the association; claims against the association president individually were dismissed because the complaint alleged no personal wrongdoing by him and sought relief that ran against the corporation.
What happened
In June 2008 the Willo Neighborhood Association held an election that amended its bylaws — redrawing the eastern service-area boundary and shifting from automatic membership to an opt-in model with a lower voting quorum. Richard Gayer, a member appearing pro se, alleged the meeting was improperly noticed as a ‘board meeting’ rather than the required membership meeting and that only about 143 votes were cast against a statutory minimum near 270. He sought a declaratory judgment invalidating the election and an injunction restoring the prior bylaws.
The association and its president moved to dismiss. On July 8, 2009, the court dismissed the claims against the president but denied dismissal of the quorum/notice claim against the association, observing it might not survive summary judgment but passed the motion-to-dismiss standard. Because Gayer had already filed a Rule 41(a)(1) voluntary dismissal without prejudice on June 19, 2009, the case ended without a merits decision.
Video overview: standing to challenge an HOA bylaw vote
Watch this overview of Gayer v. Willo Neighborhood Association, a challenge to a neighborhood association’s bylaw-amendment vote that raised questions about member standing and the Volunteer Protection Act before the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the action.
Procedural timeline
Complete uploaded source-document index
This index is generated from every public-facing source file currently present in assets/court_case_downloads/gayer-v-willo-neighborhood-association/raw/: 17 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.
Arbitration Statement Rule 72 A R C P
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Complaint
Type: Opening pleading
Starts or reframes the case and identifies the claims or relief requested.
Certificate Of Attempted Service
Type: Procedural/service filing
Procedural filing that documents service, appearance, compliance, or a required notice step.
Certificate Of Service
Type: Procedural/service filing
Procedural filing that documents service, appearance, compliance, or a required notice step.
Notice Of Intent To Dismiss For Lack Of Service
Type: Procedural/service filing
Procedural filing that documents service, appearance, compliance, or a required notice step.
Certificate Of Service
Type: Procedural/service filing
Procedural filing that documents service, appearance, compliance, or a required notice step.
Summons
Type: Procedural/service filing
Service document used to notify a defendant or respondent that the case has been filed.
Duplicate Certificate Of Service
Type: Procedural/service filing
Procedural filing that documents service, appearance, compliance, or a required notice step.
Credit Memo
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Defendant Rule 12 Motion To Dismiss
Type: Motion/application
A request for a specific ruling or procedural action; the next document is often a response or order.
Plaintiff Memorandum Opposing Motion To Dismiss
Type: Motion/application
A request for a specific ruling or procedural action; the next document is often a response or order.
Defendant Reply Support 12 Motion To Dismiss
Type: Motion/application
Reply paper; usually the final written response before the court takes the issue under advisement.
Plaintiff Notice Of Dismissal Of Entire Action Without Prejudice
Type: Procedural/service filing
Procedural filing that documents service, appearance, compliance, or a required notice step.
Ruling
Type: Court order/minute entry
Court or agency order; this is usually the document that tells readers what changed next.
Letter To Judge Blakey Judge Willett And Mr Jeanes
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Letter To Court
Type: Court/source PDF
Uploaded source file in the case record; read it in sequence with the surrounding filings to follow the procedure.
Summons
Type: Procedural/service filing
Service document used to notify a defendant or respondent that the case has been filed.
FAQ
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 | Maricopa County Superior Court No. CV2008-029900 |
|---|---|
| Court / tribunal | Superior Court |
| Decision / key date | July 8, 2009 |
| Judge / panel | Hon. A. Craig Blakey II |
| Parties | A neighborhood-association member, appearing pro se, sued the association and its president to invalidate a bylaw-amendment election he alleged was held without the statutory quorum and proper meeting notice. |
| Governing law |
|
| Topics | bylaw-amendmentquorum-requirementnonprofit-corporationdeclaratory-judgmentboard-governance |
| Outcome / holding | On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the member’s bylaw-amendment quorum and notice claim against the association stated a claim and survived dismissal, while the claims against the association president individually were dismissed for failure to allege any wrongful conduct by him personally; the action ultimately terminated on the plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal without prejudice, so no merits ruling was entered. |
Parties, Court, and Research Coverage
| Uploaded source package | 17 PDFs |
|---|---|
| Step-by-step docket roadmap | 4 roadmap entries |
| Video overview | Gayer v. Willo Neighborhood Association: Challenging an HOA Bylaw Vote |
| Study / briefing material | 1 section |
| FAQ / homeowner questions | 3 questions |
| Curated download aliases | 3 download links |
Key Issues & Findings
This Maricopa County Superior Court matter is a useful, if non-precedential, illustration of how an Arizona nonprofit community-association member can challenge a bylaw-amendment vote for lack of quorum and improper meeting procedure. In June 2008 the Willo Neighborhood Association held an election that amended its bylaws — redrawing the eastern service-area boundary and shifting from automatic membership to an opt-in model with a lower voting quorum. Gayer, a member, alleged the meeting was improperly noticed as a ‘board meeting’ rather than the required membership meeting and that only about 143 votes were cast against a statutory minimum near 270 (ten percent of roughly 2,700 voting-age residents). He sought a declaratory judgment invalidating the election and an injunction restoring the prior bylaws. The association and its president moved to dismiss. The court dismissed the claims against the president individually but allowed the quorum/notice claim against the association to proceed past the pleading stage. Because Gayer had already filed a voluntary dismissal without prejudice, the case ended without a merits judgment.
Applying the motion-to-dismiss standard and accepting the well-pleaded allegations as true, the court concluded that Gayer’s allegations under A.R.S. §§ 10-3722 and 10-11023(A) — that the amendment vote lacked the required quorum and was conducted at an improperly noticed meeting — were legally sufficient to state a claim against the corporation, even while observing that the claim might not survive summary judgment on a fuller record. As to the president, the court held the complaint alleged nothing he personally did wrong and sought relief that ran against the corporation rather than against him, so the individual claims were dismissed. Because a Rule 41(a)(1) voluntary dismissal without prejudice is effective on filing, the case ended without a decision on the merits, leaving the member free to refile.
For homeowners and members of Arizona nonprofit community associations, the ruling illustrates that a member has standing to challenge a bylaw-amendment election for failure to meet statutory quorum and meeting-notice requirements, and that such a challenge can survive a motion to dismiss. For boards, it is a reminder that volunteer officers generally cannot be held individually liable for governance disputes absent specific personal wrongdoing — the proper defendant is the association. Because the case ended in a voluntary dismissal, it sets no binding precedent, but it remains a practical example of quorum-based bylaw-amendment challenges and officer-immunity pleading in the HOA context.