Case Summary
| Case ID | 25F-H061-REL |
|---|---|
| Agency | ADRE |
| Tribunal | OAH |
| Decision Date | 2025-09-01 |
| Administrative Law Judge | Kay A. Abramsohn |
| Outcome | total |
| Filing Fees Refunded | $500.00 |
| Civil Penalties | $0.00 |
Parties & Counsel
| Petitioner | Chad D. Rainey | Counsel | — |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respondent | The Garden Lakes Community Association | Counsel | Ashley N. Turner, Esq. |
Alleged Violations
ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805(A)
Outcome Summary
The Administrative Law Judge granted the Petition, finding that Garden violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805(A) and its Bylaws by failing to provide access to vendor invoices. The ALJ concluded that vendor invoices are financial records of the association, and the HOA's argument characterizing them as exempt 'source' or 'third-party' documents was rejected. Garden was ordered to provide access to the requested documents and reimburse the filing fee.
Key Issues & Findings
Refusal to provide vendor invoices as part of financial records
Petitioner alleged that the Association failed to fulfill his records request for vendor invoices related to specific bookkeeping accounts (including lake maintenance and annual meeting expenses) for the past 12-24 months. Respondent refused disclosure, arguing invoices were 'third-party' documents and not 'records of the Association' required to be produced under ARS § 33-1805.
Orders: Garden is ordered to comply with ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805(A) and Garden Bylaws Article VI, Section 6.13, and reasonably provide examination access to the requested documents. Respondent must reimburse Petitioner’s filing fee of $500.00.
Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes
Disposition: petitioner_win
- ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805(A)
- Garden Bylaws Article VI, Section 6.13
- ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 10-11601
Analytics Highlights
- ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805
- ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805(A)
- Garden Bylaws Article VI, Section 6.13
- ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 10-11601
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
25F-H061-REL Decision – 1327389.pdf
25F-H061-REL Decision – 1332130.pdf
25F-H061-REL Decision – 1334329.pdf
25F-H061-REL Decision – 1345206.pdf
Briefing Document: Rainey v. The Garden Lakes Community Association
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the proceedings and outcome of case number 25F-H061-REL, a dispute between homeowner Chad D. Rainey (Petitioner) and The Garden Lakes Community Association (Respondent) adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. The central issue was the Association’s refusal to provide copies of vendor invoices related to lake maintenance and other expenses, which were requested by the Petitioner on April 18, 2025.
The Association argued that such invoices were not “records of the Association” under Arizona law, but rather “third-party” or “source” documents that it was not obligated to disclose. The Petitioner contended that Arizona statute A.R.S. § 33-1805(A), which mandates that “all financial and other records” be made available, clearly includes these invoices.
Following an evidentiary hearing on August 4, 2025, Administrative Law Judge Kay A. Abramsohn ruled decisively in favor of the Petitioner. The final decision, issued September 1, 2025, concluded that the Association’s characterization of the invoices as “disingenuous” and found that records kept by a management company on behalf of an association are legally considered the association’s records. The judge ordered the Association to provide access to the requested invoices and reimburse the Petitioner’s $500 filing fee, establishing that an association cannot arbitrarily exclude such fundamental financial documents from member examination.
Case Overview
Detail
Description
Case Number
No. 25F-H061-REL
Petitioner
Chad D. Rainey
Respondent
The Garden Lakes Community Association
Adjudicating Body
Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)
Presiding Judge
Administrative Law Judge Kay A. Abramsohn
Hearing Date
August 4, 2025
Decision Date
September 1, 2025
Statutes at Issue
A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
Bylaws at Issue
Article VI, Section 6.13
Procedural History
1. Initial Concern: Beginning March 12, 2025, Mr. Rainey communicated with the community manager regarding concerns about lake quality and fish kills within the community.
2. Formal Records Request: On April 18, 2025, Mr. Rainey sent a formal email request to the Association for specific documents, including vendor invoices for lake maintenance accounts.
3. Association’s Refusal: In a letter dated May 1, 2025, the Association’s legal counsel provided some requested documents (contracts) but explicitly refused to produce any vendor invoices.
4. Petition Filed: On May 8, 2025, Mr. Rainey filed a petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate, alleging the Association violated state law and its own bylaws.
5. Subpoena Dispute: A subpoena was issued for the Association’s Treasurer, Deborah Taylor. The Association filed a Motion to Quash on July 21, 2025, which was initially granted on July 24. However, upon reconsideration, the OAH reissued the subpoena on July 30, 2025, compelling Ms. Taylor’s virtual appearance.
6. Evidentiary Hearing: A virtual hearing was conducted via Google Meet on August 4, 2025.
7. Final Decision: On September 1, 2025, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) issued a final decision granting the Petitioner’s petition.
The Central Dispute: The Records Request
The core of the conflict was Mr. Rainey’s formal request for documents, specifically the Association’s refusal to provide invoices.
Petitioner’s Request (April 18, 2025)
Mr. Rainey requested access to copies of the following:
• Invoices for the past 24 months for bookkeeping accounts related to lake maintenance, including:
◦ 618 Water Feature Maintenance
◦ 66702 Lake Repairs
◦ 664 Water Feature Repairs/Maint
◦ 70705 Chemicals
◦ 72308 Lake Chemicals/Dye
◦ 724 Fish Stock
• Invoices for the past 12 months for account 56701 Annual Meeting Expense.
• Copy of the current contract with CCMC (the management company).
• Copy of the current contract for the landscape contractor.
Respondent’s Refusal (May 1, 2025)
The Association’s law firm, CHBD Law, responded by providing the CCMC and landscape contracts but refused to supply the requested invoices. The letter stated:
“[T]he Association declines to produce any documents related to your requests for invoices from various vendors or other contractors. Such third-party invoices are not ‘records of the Association’ and the Association has no obligation under Arizona law to produce or disclose thirty-party invoices. See A.R.S. § 10-11601. For this reason, the Association declines to produce any of the invoices you requested for the past 12 or 24 months.”
Key Arguments Presented at Hearing
Petitioner’s Position (Chad D. Rainey)
• Plain Language of the Law: A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) is unambiguous, stating “all financial and other records of the association shall be made reasonably available.” The term “all” is inclusive and does not permit the Association to selectively withhold records like invoices.
• Insufficiency of Available Records: The summary financial documents on the homeowner portal are inadequate for transparency, as they only list line-item totals without identifying vendors or detailing specific services performed.
• Refutation of Association’s Legal Defense:
◦ The Association’s reliance on A.R.S. § 10-11601 (corporate records) is misplaced. Paragraph F of that statute explicitly states that in a conflict, Title 33 (which governs planned communities) prevails.
◦ None of the specific exemptions listed in A.R.S. § 33-1805(B) (e.g., privileged communications, pending litigation) apply to vendor invoices.
• Governing Documents: The Association’s own bylaws (Section 6.13) require it to keep “detailed and accurate records… of the receipts and expenditures affecting the Common Areas,” which logically includes invoices.
• Motivation for Request: The request was made in good faith to understand how the Association was maintaining community lakes amid declining water quality. As Mr. Rainey stated, “I requested these specific and pointed invoices to learn about how the association maintained the lakes.”
Respondent’s Position (The Garden Lakes Community Association)
• Invoices are Not “Association Records”: The core of the defense was the assertion that invoices created by third-party vendors are not financial records of the Association. They were characterized as “source documents” that inform the financials but are not the financials themselves.
• Demonstrated Transparency: The Association argued it complies with the law by making its official financial records—such as balance sheets, statements of revenue, and budget summaries—available to all homeowners on the online portal.
• Operational Structure: The defense emphasized that invoices are not part of the Association’s ordinary records. They are handled exclusively by the management company’s accounting department, processed through a separate system called “IPS,” and are not included in the monthly financial packets reviewed by the Board of Directors.
• Statutory Interpretation: The Association contended that the statute does not specifically mention the word “invoice” and therefore does not compel their disclosure.
Key Witness Testimony
Deborah Taylor (Association Treasurer)
• Role and Responsibilities: Ms. Taylor testified that her role as Treasurer involves reviewing financial statements prepared by the management company, primarily to check for variances from the budget.
• Invoice Handling: She confirmed that neither she nor any other board member reviews, processes, or approves individual vendor invoices. This function is entirely delegated to the management company. She stated, “They [the Board] do not” review invoices and approve them for payment. When asked who does, she said, “As far as I’m I know, the management company. That’s what they’re contracted for.”
• Financial Packet: She testified that the monthly financial packet provided to the Board is over 100 pages long but does not contain copies of vendor invoices.
Stephanie Via (Community Manager, CCMC)
• Invoice Process: Ms. Via detailed the “life cycle” of an invoice. Vendors typically send invoices to CCMC’s invoicing department, which are then uploaded into a third-party system called IPS. She or others in the management company then process the payments.
• Board Approval: She testified that the Board approves expenditures based on contracts agreed upon in open meetings, not by reviewing individual invoices. For non-contractual repairs, she has a spending limit of $2,500 for emergencies.
• Online Financials: Ms. Via confirmed that the financial statements posted on the homeowner portal are summaries of about 14-15 pages and do not contain vendor names, only line-item categories. When asked if a homeowner could see who was paid, she responded, “It doesn’t have vendor names, but it has line items that pertain to lake maintenance or landscape.”
Administrative Law Judge’s Decision and Order
The ALJ’s final decision sided entirely with the Petitioner, rejecting the Association’s arguments and interpretation of the law.
Findings and Conclusions
• Records Held by Agent are Association Records: The decision established that “Garden’s financial documents are prepared by, and kept in the custody of, Garden’s property management company and, thus, are considered to be Garden’s documents.” An association cannot evade its disclosure obligations by delegating record-keeping to a third party.
• Rejection of “Source Document” Argument: The ALJ found the Association’s attempt to reclassify the invoices to be without merit, stating, “Garden’s portrayal of requested documents as ‘executive,’ ‘third-party,’ or ‘source’ is disingenuous.”
• Plain Meaning of Statute and Bylaws: The decision affirmed that A.R.S. § 33-1805’s use of “all financial and other records” is comprehensive. Furthermore, the Association’s own bylaws require “detailed and accurate records” of expenditures, which invoices represent.
• Violation Confirmed: The judge concluded that the Petitioner had sustained his burden of proof and that the Association violated both A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) and its own Bylaws (Article VI, Section 6.13) by failing to provide the requested records.
Final Order
1. The Petitioner, Chad D. Rainey, is declared the prevailing party and his Petition is GRANTED.
2. The Garden Lakes Community Association is ordered to comply with the law and reasonably provide examination access to the requested documents.
3. The Association is ordered to reimburse the Petitioner’s filing fee of $500.00.
4. No civil penalty was found to be appropriate in the matter.
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
- Chad D. Rainey (petitioner)
Self-represented at hearing
Respondent Side
- Ashley N. Turner (HOA attorney)
CHBD Law - Deborah Taylor (Treasurer/Board Member/Witness)
The Garden Lakes Community Association
Respondent's Treasurer/Board Member; presented testimony for Garden - Stephanie Via (Community Manager/Witness)
CCMC Capital Consulting Property Management
Also referred to as Stephanie Villa in findings. Presented testimony for Garden. - Joshua Bolen (Attorney)
CHBD Law
Electronic recipient of OAH documents - Theresa Laubenthal (Staff)
CHBD Law
Electronic recipient of OAH documents
Neutral Parties
- Kay A. Abramsohn (ALJ)
Office of Administrative Hearings - Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Other Participants
- Madison Raider (Observer)
CHBD Law
Summer associate observing the hearing - Sebastian Shuya (Observer)
CHBD Law
Summer associate observing the hearing - V. Nunez (ADRE Staff)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Electronic recipient of OAH documents (derived from email [email protected]),,, - D. Jones (ADRE Staff)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Electronic recipient of OAH documents (derived from email [email protected]),,, - L. Abril (ADRE Staff)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Electronic recipient of OAH documents (derived from email [email protected]),,, - M. Neat (ADRE Staff)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Electronic recipient of OAH documents (derived from email [email protected]),,, - L. Recchia (ADRE Staff)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Electronic recipient of OAH documents (derived from email [email protected]),,, - G. Osborn (ADRE Staff)
Arizona Department of Real Estate
Electronic recipient of OAH documents (derived from email [email protected]),,,