Note: A Rehearing was requested for this case. The dashboard statistics reflect the final outcome of the rehearing process.
Case Summary
Case ID
20F-H2020051-REL-RHG
Agency
ADRE
Tribunal
OAH
Decision Date
2021-01-08
Administrative Law Judge
Kay Abramsohn
Outcome
loss
Filing Fees Refunded
$0.00
Civil Penalties
$0.00
Parties & Counsel
Petitioner
Debra K. Morin
Counsel
—
Respondent
Solera Chandler Homeowners' Association, Inc.
Counsel
Lydia A. Perce Linsmeier, Esq.
Alleged Violations
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1
Outcome Summary
The Administrative Law Judge ruled that Solera was in compliance with its governing documents, specifically CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, concluding that the Board is the 'sole judge' regarding appropriate maintenance of AREAS. The Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof, and the Rehearing Petition was dismissed.
Why this result: Petitioner failed to sustain her burden to establish a violation. The governing documents grant the Board 'the sole judge' authority over maintenance, and Petitioner did not provide legal support requiring the HOA to meet the homeowner maintenance standard.
Key Issues & Findings
Failure to maintain Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times
Petitioner alleged that Solera failed to maintain Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times, arguing that the same strict maintenance standard applied to homeowners (CC&R 7.2) should apply to the HOA (CC&R 7.1). The issue was heard on rehearing after the initial decision dismissed the petition.
Orders: The Administrative Law Judge concluded Solera was in compliance with its governing documents and was the prevailing party. Petitioner's appeal (Rehearing Petition) was dismissed.
Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No
Disposition: petitioner_loss
Cited:
A.R.S. 33-1801 et seq.
A.R.S. §§ 32-2102
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199 et al.
A.R.S. § 32-2199.05
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199(2)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.01(D)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.02
A.R.S. § 41-1092
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2
CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-116
Analytics Highlights
Topics: HOA Dispute, CC&R Violation, Maintenance Standard, Areas of Association Responsibility, Rehearing, Sole Judge
Briefing Document: Morin v. Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc.
Executive Summary
This briefing document synthesizes the findings and rulings from an administrative law case involving a homeowner, Debra K. Morin (Petitioner), and the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (Respondent/Solera). The case centered on the Petitioner’s allegations that the HOA failed to maintain common areas to the standards required by its own governing documents.
The Petitioner filed a two-issue petition, with the primary surviving issue being that Solera, its Board of Directors, and its management company were not maintaining the “Areas of Association Responsibility” (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times. The Petitioner’s core argument was that the same stringent maintenance standard applied to individual homeowners must be equally applied to the HOA. She provided extensive photographic evidence of issues such as weeds, deteriorating sidewalks, street disrepair, and exposed wiring.
The HOA defended its actions by citing its established procedures for maintenance, including a committee review process, a scheduled Reserves plan, and the use of licensed contractors. Critically, Solera’s defense rested on provisions within its Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs), which grant the Board of Directors the exclusive right to interpret the CC&Rs and designate it as the “sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement” of all common areas.
Following an initial hearing, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) dismissed the petition, finding that the Petitioner had not met the burden of proof. The ALJ ruled that under the governing documents, the HOA Board has sole discretion in maintenance matters, and the Petitioner’s subjective opinions on how and when work should be done were not relevant to determining a violation. The Petitioner was granted a rehearing, where she presented additional evidence and arguments. However, the ALJ upheld the original decision, reaffirming that the CC&Rs grant the Board authority superseding that of an individual homeowner in determining appropriate maintenance. The petition was dismissed, and Solera was deemed the prevailing party in both instances.
Case Overview
Case Name
Debra K. Morin, Petitioner, v. Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc., Respondent.
Case Number
No. 20F-H2020051-REL / 20F-H2020051-REL-RHG
Tribunal
Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings
Presiding Judge
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Kay Abramsohn
Petitioner
Debra K. Morin (represented herself)
Respondent
Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (represented by Lydia Linsmeier, Esq.)
Petition Filed
On or about March 12, 2020
Initial Hearing
May 20, 2020 and July 15, 2020
Initial Decision
August 19, 2020 (Petition Dismissed)
Rehearing Hearing
December 16, 2020
Rehearing Decision
January 8, 2021 (Original Dismissal Upheld)
Petitioner’s Allegations and Arguments
The Petitioner, a resident of Solera for four years, filed a petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging violations of Solera’s Articles of Incorporation, By-Laws, CC&Rs, and Rules and Regulations (R&Rs). The allegations were organized into two primary issues.
Issue #1: Lack of Direct Communication
• Allegation: Solera, its Board, and its management company, Premier Management Company (Premier), “do not allow direct communication from homeowners.”
• Requested Relief: The Petitioner sought to have this “policy” rescinded.
• Outcome: This issue was connected to allegations of ethics violations based on the Board’s Code of Ethics, which the Tribunal determined was a non-governing document outside its jurisdiction. As a result, the Petitioner withdrew Issue #1 during the May 20, 2020 hearing.
Issue #2: Failure to Maintain Common Areas
• Allegation: Solera, its Board, and Premier “are not providing oversight to the General Manager in maintaining all Areas of Association Responsibility … in good condition and repair at all times.” Specific complaints included “uncontrolled weeds” and poor maintenance of the Community Center and other AREAS.
• Core Argument: The Petitioner’s central thesis was that the HOA must be held to the identical maintenance standard it imposes on homeowners. She argued that just as homeowners are required to maintain their lots “in a weed free condition 365 days a year,” the HOA has no discretion for delays in addressing maintenance issues in common areas.
• Requested Relief:
1. A public admission by the Board of its failures to follow governing documents.
2. The establishment of “direct communication rules” for reporting management deficiencies.
3. Compliance monitoring by the “Real Estate Board.”
Evidence and Specific Complaints
The Petitioner presented over 80 photographs at the initial hearing (growing to 310 by the rehearing) and multiple emails to document a wide range of perceived maintenance failures.
Maintenance Issue
Petitioner’s Specific Complaint
Uncontrolled weeds in granite rock locations throughout the community.
Community Center
Poor exterior condition.
Streets & Curbs
Deteriorating asphalt, cracking, and issues with sealing.
Sidewalks
Trip hazards and disintegrating cool-decking.
Drainage
Clogged storm drains and water pooling issues.
Landscaping
Exposed wiring for lights, exposed drip irrigation lines, and unremoved tree stumps.
Disrepair of boundary walls.
A key piece of evidence was a February 21, 2020 email exchange regarding weeds, which the ALJ found “representative of the overall situation.”
Petitioner’s Complaint: “This is NOT being done and our HOA looks disgusting with the continued presence of unchecked weeds inside and outside our community! No excuses, you cannot hold homeowners to a higher standard than you are willing to do for our HOA. You are on notice to rectify this violation immediately!”
General Manager’s Response: “…the landscape crew hula hoes and sprays daily, based on routine maintenance cycle and location of site work… Considering that we have 1,143,550 square feet of granite and 270,933 square feet of turf, the maintenance of weeds is a continuous and ongoing concern that is constantly being addressed.”
Petitioner’s Rebuttal: “YOUR response is just more excuses!… It appears that since it is not your personal money being spent, it is ok to have substandard work performance.”
Respondent’s Position and Defense
Solera HOA moved to dismiss the petition, arguing the issues were outside the Department’s jurisdiction and the requested relief could not be granted. While the motion was effectively denied after Issue #1 was withdrawn, Solera’s core defense remained consistent throughout the proceedings.
• Central Legal Argument: Solera contended that its Board of Directors is vested with the ultimate authority on maintenance matters by the community’s governing documents. It repeatedly cited CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, which states the Board “shall be the sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement of all [AREAS].”
• Interpretation Authority: The HOA also pointed to CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5, which gives it the “exclusive right to construe and interpret the provisions of the [CC&Rs],” with such interpretations being “final, conclusive and binding.”
• Operational Defense: Denise Frazier, Solera’s on-site general manager, testified that the HOA has established processes for maintenance.
◦ Committee Structure: A Building and Grounds Committee (B&G) reviews projects, which are then assessed by a Finance Committee before going to the Board for approval.
◦ Reserves Schedule: Solera maintains a Reserves schedule for large projects, such as sidewalk repairs (every 4 years), street repairs (every 8 years), and sealing cracks (every 2 years).
◦ Vendor Management: The Board relies on licensed contractors for specialized work, including landscaping, tree trimming (by two different companies for different heights), and stump grinding.
• Response to Specific Issues:
◦ Weeds: Frazier attributed the prevalence of weeds in early 2020 to an unusual amount of rain, creating “optimal” conditions. She noted that Solera had instructed landscapers to use dye in the weed spray to demonstrate to residents that spraying was occurring.
◦ Sidewalks: Frazier acknowledged a several-month delay in repairing a specific sidewalk area but stated that warning cones had been placed in the interim. Solera uses a ¼ inch standard for review but the City of Chandler’s ½ inch trip-hazard guideline for repairs.
◦ Exposed Wiring: This was explained as a temporary measure by landscapers to avoid cutting electrical and irrigation lines during tree and granite replacement projects.
Rulings and Legal Conclusions
The Administrative Law Judge dismissed the Petitioner’s case after the initial hearing and reaffirmed this dismissal after a rehearing, finding that the Petitioner failed to meet her legal burden of proof.
Key Legal Principles Applied
• Burden of Proof: The ALJ established that the Petitioner “bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that a respondent has violated the planned community document(s’) provisions.”
• Supremacy of Governing Documents: The case was decided on the interpretation of the HOA’s CC&Rs, which function as the binding contract between the association and its members.
• Board’s Discretionary Authority: The central and decisive legal conclusion was that the HOA’s governing documents explicitly grant the Board superior authority over maintenance decisions.
◦ CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1 (“sole judge”) was interpreted to mean that only Solera is charged with determining when and how to perform maintenance, repair, and replacement in common areas.
◦ The ALJ concluded this provision “lifts the Board’s authority above that of a homeowner.” The Petitioner failed to provide legal support for her argument that the same maintenance standard must be applied to the Board as is applied to homeowners.
• Jurisdictional Limits: The Tribunal’s role is limited to adjudicating alleged violations of governing documents or statutes. The ALJ noted that a “homeowner’s dissatisfaction with management is not within the purview of this process or the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.”
Final Order
The ALJ concluded that Solera was in compliance with its governing documents, including the critical CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1. The Petitioner’s subjective opinions about the timeliness or quality of repairs were deemed irrelevant in the face of the Board’s contractual authority to be the “sole judge.”
Initial Order (August 19, 2020): “IT IS ORDERED Petitioner’s Petition is dismissed and Solera is deemed the prevailing party.”
Rehearing Order (January 8, 2021): “IT IS ORDERED that Solera is the prevailing party with regard to the Rehearing, and Petitioner’s appeal is dismissed.” The order was declared binding on the parties.
Study Guide – 20F-H2020051-REL-RHG
Study Guide: Morin v. Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc.
This guide provides a review of the administrative case between Debra K. Morin (Petitioner) and the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (Respondent), as detailed in the Administrative Law Judge Decision of August 19, 2020, and the subsequent Rehearing Decision of January 8, 2021.
Short-Answer Quiz
Answer the following questions in 2-3 sentences each, based on the provided case documents.
1. Who were the primary parties involved in this case, and what were their respective roles?
2. What were the two main issues the petitioner, Debra K. Morin, raised in her initial petition filed on March 12, 2020?
3. Why was the petitioner’s first issue, regarding direct communication, withdrawn during the initial hearing?
4. What was the petitioner’s central argument regarding the maintenance standard that Solera should be held to?
5. According to the CC&Rs, what specific authority does the Solera Board have regarding maintenance, which formed the core of its defense?
6. What type of evidence did the petitioner primarily use to document her claims of poor maintenance in the Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS)?
7. Who is Denise Frazier, and what role did she play in the proceedings?
8. What was the Administrative Law Judge’s final decision in the initial hearing on August 19, 2020?
9. On what grounds did the Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate grant the petitioner’s request for a rehearing?
10. What was the final outcome of the case after the rehearing decision was issued on January 8, 2021?
Answer Key
1. The primary parties were Debra K. Morin, the Petitioner and a homeowner, and the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (Solera), the Respondent. The case was heard by Administrative Law Judge Kay Abramsohn, and Solera was represented by Premier Management Company and its on-site general manager.
2. The petitioner’s Issue #1 alleged that Solera, its Board, and its management company “do not allow direct communication from homeowners.” Issue #2 alleged they were not providing oversight to the General Manager in maintaining all Areas of Association Responsibility in good condition and repair at all times.
3. The petitioner withdrew Issue #1 after it was determined that the Tribunal’s jurisdiction does not include interpreting or applying non-governing documents. Her complaint was based on the Solera Code of Ethics, which the Tribunal could not consider.
4. The petitioner argued that the same maintenance standard must be applied to Solera as is applied to homeowners. She contended that if homeowners are required by the governing documents to maintain their lots “in good condition and repair at all times,” then the HOA must be held to the identical standard for common areas (AREAS).
5. Solera’s defense centered on CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, which states the Board “shall be the sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement of all [AREAS].” Additionally, CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5 gives Solera the exclusive right to construe and interpret the CC&Rs.
6. The petitioner presented a large volume of photographic evidence, including over eighty photos for the initial hearing and more for the rehearing. These photographs were intended to document weeds, issues with sidewalks, exposed wiring, storm drains, and other maintenance problems in the common areas.
7. Denise Frazier is the on-site general manager for Solera and an employee of Premier Management Company. She testified on behalf of Solera regarding its maintenance schedules, procedures, reserve studies, and responses to the specific issues raised by the petitioner.
8. In the initial hearing, the Administrative Law Judge dismissed the petitioner’s petition and deemed Solera the prevailing party. The judge concluded that the petitioner had not demonstrated a violation of the governing documents, as the CC&Rs grant the Board sole judgment on maintenance matters.
9. The request for a rehearing was granted because the petitioner claimed there were irregularities in the proceedings, misconduct by the prevailing party, and that the decision was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, and not supported by the evidence or contrary to law.
10. The rehearing affirmed the original decision. The Administrative Law Judge again concluded that the petitioner failed to sustain her burden of proof and that Solera was in compliance with its governing documents, specifically CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1. The appeal was dismissed, and Solera was again named the prevailing party.
Essay Questions
The following questions are designed to encourage deeper analysis of the case. No answers are provided.
1. Analyze the central legal conflict in this case by contrasting the petitioner’s interpretation of CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2 with the respondent’s defense based on CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1 and Article 9, Section 9.5. How did the Administrative Law Judge resolve this interpretive dispute?
2. Discuss the concept of jurisdiction as it applied to this case. Explain why certain arguments and evidence presented by the petitioner—such as the Board’s Code of Ethics, Premier Management Company standards, and City of Chandler ordinances—were deemed outside the Tribunal’s authority to consider.
3. Evaluate the petitioner’s strategy and use of evidence. Discuss the strengths and weaknesses of relying heavily on photographic evidence and detailed email complaints. Why did this “enormity” of evidence ultimately fail to meet the “preponderance of the evidence” standard?
4. Explain the significance of the phrase “sole judge” in CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1. How does this clause grant discretionary authority to the HOA Board, and how did it function as the key element in defeating the petitioner’s claim?
5. Trace the procedural history of the case, from the initial Petition and Motion to Dismiss through the original hearing, the Decision, the Rehearing Request, and the final Rehearing Decision. Identify the key rulings and turning points that determined the ultimate outcome.
Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
The judge presiding over the administrative hearing at the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. In this case, Judge Kay Abramsohn.
AREAS (Areas of Association Responsibility)
The common areas within the Solera development that the Homeowners’ Association is responsible for managing, maintaining, repairing, and replacing.
By-Laws
One of the governing documents for the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association.
CC&Rs (Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions)
A primary governing document for the Solera development, specifically the “Solera Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions for Springfield Lakes.” It outlines the rights and responsibilities of the homeowners and the association.
Denise Frazier
The on-site general manager for Solera, employed by Premier Management Company, who testified on behalf of the association regarding its maintenance operations.
Maintenance Standard
Defined in CC&R Article 1, Section 1.30 as “the standard of maintenance of Improvements established from time to time by the Board and/or the Architectural Review Committee in the Design Guidelines, or in the absence of any such standards, the standards of maintenance of Improvements generally prevailing through the Project.”
Motion to Dismiss
A formal request filed by Solera asking the Department of Real Estate to dismiss the petition on the grounds that the issues were outside the Department’s jurisdiction and the requested relief could not be granted.
Petitioner
The party who filed the petition initiating the legal action. In this case, Debra K. Morin, a homeowner in Solera.
Preponderance of the evidence
The burden of proof in this administrative proceeding. It is defined as proof that convinces the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not.
Premier Management Company
The management company hired by Solera to handle day-to-day operations of the community.
Project Documents
The set of governing documents for the community, defined as the CC&Rs, any supplemental declarations, the By-Laws, the R&Rs, and the Design Guidelines.
Respondent
The party against whom the petition is filed. In this case, the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc.
R&Rs (Rules and Regulations)
One of the governing documents for the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association.
Tribunal
A term used in the documents to refer to the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH), where the hearing was conducted.
Blog Post – 20F-H2020051-REL-RHG
A Homeowner Took on Her HOA with Over 300 Photos of Evidence. The Reason She Lost Is a Warning for Everyone.
Introduction: The Familiar Fight
It’s a scenario familiar to millions of Americans living in planned communities. You receive a violation notice for a minor infraction on your property, yet when you look at the common areas your HOA is responsible for, you see overgrown weeds, cracked sidewalks, and general disrepair. It feels deeply unfair. Why are homeowners held to a strict standard while the association itself seems to neglect its duties?
This exact frustration drove Debra K. Morin to take on her Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association. Armed with over 300 photographs documenting every weed and crack, she was certain her case was airtight. But she lost. The reasons why her case failed are a stark warning for any homeowner, revealing a legal battle that hinged entirely on the community’s binding contract: the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).
——————————————————————————–
The 5 Surprising Lessons from One Homeowner’s HOA Lawsuit
1. The “Sole Judge” Clause: Your HOA’s Ultimate Defense
The single most critical factor in this case was a single clause buried in the HOA’s governing documents. Ms. Morin argued that the HOA must “maintain in good condition and repair at all times” the common areas, believing this was the same standard applied to homeowners. However, the HOA pointed to CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, which designates the HOA Board as the “sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement” of all common areas.
This clause proved to be an almost impenetrable defense. In essence, the legal standard for maintenance was not what a “reasonable person” would consider good repair, but whatever the Board, in its exclusive judgment, decided was appropriate. Even with extensive photo evidence, the case failed because the contract Ms. Morin agreed to when she bought her home gave the Board the ultimate discretion. The Administrative Law Judge’s decision made this crystal clear:
“While the CC&Rs allow an owner to bring to the Board a complaint, the CC&Rs specify that the Board is the sole judge regarding appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement of all AREAS.”
This “sole judge” clause is the cornerstone of a much broader power imbalance, one that is codified throughout the governing documents.
2. A Power Imbalance Is Written into the Rules
While Ms. Morin argued for an equal standard of responsibility, the legal documents revealed a clear and intentional power imbalance. CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5, granted the HOA the “exclusive right to construe and interpret the provisions of the [CC&Rs],” and stated that its interpretation is “final, conclusive and binding.”
This structure legally transforms the relationship from a partnership of equals into one of administrator and subject, where one party holds the power of final interpretation. The governing documents describe in detail how the HOA can levy penalties against an owner for violations, but they provide no equivalent process for an owner to penalize the HOA for its failures. The judge in the rehearing decision explicitly summarized this built-in hierarchy:
“Thus, it is clear, that pursuant to the governing documents, the Board’s authority is lifted above that of a homeowner.”
With the Board’s authority so clearly established, Ms. Morin’s mountain of evidence was about to run into a contractual brick wall.
3. An “Enormity of Evidence” Isn’t Always the Right Evidence
Ms. Morin presented a significant volume of evidence, starting with over 80 photographs in the first hearing and later referencing what she called an “enormity” of evidence totaling over 300 pictures of weeds, damaged sidewalks, and other maintenance issues.
The critical legal distinction the judge made was that the photographs documented the condition of the common areas, but they did not prove a violation of the governing documents. The legal question was not, “Are there weeds?” The question was, “Did the Board violate a contract that explicitly makes it the sole judge of maintenance?” This demonstrates that in a contract dispute, the quality of evidence is defined by its relevance to the specific contractual terms, not its sheer volume.
4. “At All Times” Doesn’t Mean “Instantly”
A key part of the homeowner’s argument was that the HOA was failing to “maintain in good condition and repair at all times” by allowing maintenance issues to persist for months. In response, the HOA detailed its operational reality. The HOA provided evidence of long-term capital plans, such as sealing street cracks every two years and major sidewalk repairs on a four-year cycle. Daily tasks, like weed control, were handled by landscape crews operating on a continuous, rotating schedule across the large community.
From a legal perspective, “at all times” is interpreted through the lens of operational reasonableness for a large entity, not as a guarantee of immediate perfection. For an organization managing a vast property, this standard is met through consistent processes and schedules, not by fixing every issue the moment it is reported.
5. Your Dissatisfaction Is Not a Lawsuit
At its heart, the case was driven by Ms. Morin’s deep frustration. The judge recognized that her petition stemmed from a core belief that the Board and its General Manager were unresponsive and providing poor oversight. While these feelings may have been valid, they were not legally actionable on their own. The judge’s decision in the rehearing drew a firm line between a homeowner’s frustration and a legal claim:
“However, a homeowner’s dissatisfaction with management is not within the purview of this process or the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.”
This highlights a common misconception: while feelings of poor customer service are valid, they are legally irrelevant unless they can be tied to a specific, provable breach of the governing documents or a violation of state law.
——————————————————————————–
Conclusion: Read Before You Sign
The primary lesson from this case is the absolute authority of a community’s governing documents. In any dispute, the specific, written words of the CC&Rs—the contract you sign when you buy your home—will almost always outweigh a homeowner’s subjective standards, sense of fairness, or even a mountain of photographic evidence.
This case serves as a powerful reminder that from a contractual standpoint, the rules are not always designed to be “fair,” but to be enforceable. It leaves every homeowner with a critical question:
Before you complain about your HOA, have you read the rulebook they’re playing by—and that you agreed to?
The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Respondent HOA acted in compliance with the CC&R’s and was the prevailing party, finding that the HOA had the right to enter property to correct emergency conditions, but was under no obligation to do so. The petition was dismissed following the rehearing.
Why this result: Petitioner failed to sustain her burden to establish a violation by Respondent of Article XII Section 6, and Article XIII Section 1(d) and 4 or the CC&R’s. The ALJ noted that the relief sought (forcing access) may require a different venue or party.
Key Issues & Findings
Whether 10,000 North Central Homeowners Association violated the CCR’s Article XII, Section 6 & Article XIII, Section 1(d) & 4
Petitioner filed a single-issue petition alleging the HOA violated CC&Rs by refusing to grant access to a neighboring property to investigate and remedy a water leak causing damage. The ALJ found the HOA had the right, but not the obligation, to enter the property.
Orders: Petitioner’s petition was denied in the initial decision (August 17, 2020). Upon rehearing, the Administrative Law Judge concluded that there was no violation by the Respondent, and the Respondent was the prevailing party; Petitioner’s appeal was dismissed.
Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No
Disposition: respondent_win
Cited:
ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02
ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.05
ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 41-2198.01
Analytics Highlights
Topics: HOA Dispute, CC&R Enforcement, Right of Entry, Drainage Issues, Rehearing
Briefing Document: Abbass v. 10000 North Central Homeowners Association
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the findings from two Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decisions concerning a dispute between homeowner Susan E. Abbass (Petitioner) and the 10000 North Central Homeowners Association (Respondent). The core of the dispute was the Petitioner’s request for the Association to exercise its authority under the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) to enter a neighboring property to inspect the source of a persistent water leak affecting the Petitioner’s home.
The ALJ ultimately denied the Petitioner’s petition and subsequent appeal. The central conclusion across both hearings was that while the Association’s CC&Rs grant it the right to enter a member’s property under specific circumstances (such as for inspections or emergencies), they do not impose an obligation or duty to do so. The Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof required to demonstrate that the Association violated any provision of the CC&Rs. The ALJ characterized the situation as a “neighbor versus neighbor dispute” and determined that the Association acted within its business judgment by requiring more definitive proof of the leak’s source before authorizing entry, citing concerns over potential liability.
Case Overview
This matter involves a single-issue petition filed by a homeowner against her Homeowners Association (HOA) with the Arizona Department of Real Estate. The case was referred to the Office of Administrative Hearings for adjudication.
Case Details
Information
Case Number
20F-H2020057-REL
Petitioner
Susan E. Abbass
Respondent
10000 North Central Homeowners Association
Administrative Law Judge
Adam D. Stone
Initial Hearing Date
July 28, 2020
Rehearing Date
November 24, 2020
Core Allegation
The Association violated CC&Rs Article XII, Section 6 and Article XIII, Sections 1(d) & 4 by failing to grant access to a neighbor’s property to investigate a water leak.
Chronology of Key Events
1. November 14, 2019: Ronald Pick, residing with the Petitioner, discovers the home office carpet is “completely soaked with water.” He determines the drainage issue originates from the neighboring property.
2. November 2019: After the neighbor refuses to cooperate, the Petitioner contacts Robert Kersten, the Association’s Community Manager. Kersten sends a violation notice to the neighbor.
3. January 2020: The Association’s Board of Directors informs Kersten that they will handle the matter directly, and he ceases interaction with the Petitioner.
4. May 5, 2020: The Petitioner files a single-issue petition against the Association with the Arizona Department of Real Estate, paying a $500.00 fee.
5. July 28, 2020: The initial evidentiary hearing is held before an Administrative Law Judge.
6. August 17, 2020: The ALJ issues a decision denying the Petitioner’s petition, finding she failed to meet her burden of proof.
7. August 31, 2020: The Petitioner files a request for a rehearing.
8. October 14, 2020: The Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate grants the request for a rehearing.
9. November 24, 2020: The rehearing is conducted.
10. December 1, 2020: The ALJ issues a final decision, again finding for the Respondent and dismissing the Petitioner’s appeal.
Summary of Arguments
Petitioner’s Position (Susan E. Abbass)
• The Problem: A water leak originating from a neighboring property caused damage, with recurring water intrusion during rainfall.
• Attempted Resolution: The Petitioner and Mr. Pick attempted to work with the neighbor, who was uncooperative on the advice of her insurance company. They then sought the Association’s help to gain access for inspection.
• Core Argument: The Petitioner argued that the water leak constituted an “emergency situation” and that the Association had an obligation under the CC&Rs to grant access to the neighbor’s property for inspection.
• Evidence Provided: The Petitioner provided the Association with all available evidence, including a report from the City of Phoenix.
• Financial Responsibility: The Petitioner offered to pay for a geotechnical engineer and any associated costs for the inspection.
• Legal Basis: The Petitioner claimed the Association violated CC&Rs Article XII, Section 6 and Article XIII, Sections 1(d) and 4.
Respondent’s Position (10000 North Central HOA)
• Actions Taken: The Association, through its manager Robert Kersten, acknowledged the complaint and sent a violation notice to the neighbor regarding improper vegetation. They also contacted the neighbor to request access.
• Core Argument: The Association contended that the CC&Rs do not allow its manager to authorize entry “whenever they feel like it.” Entry requires “reasonable justification” and “some type of proof,” which the Board determined had not been provided by the Petitioner.
• Business Judgment and Liability: Respondent’s counsel argued the Board was exercising its business judgment to avoid potential liability that could arise from granting third-party access to a member’s property without sufficient cause.
• Neighbor’s Actions: The Association stated that, to its knowledge, the neighbor’s insurance company inspected the water flow and determined the neighbor was not at fault.
• Evidence Provided: At the rehearing, the Association submitted photographs (Exhibits K, L, M) purportedly showing a fixed pipe and drainage flowing away from the Petitioner’s property.
Analysis of CC&R Provisions
The dispute centered on the interpretation of specific articles within the Association’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions.
Article
Provision Summary
XII, Section 6
Easement in Favor of Association: Grants the Association and its agents the right to enter Lots for specific purposes, including: (a) inspection of owner maintenance, (c) correction of emergency conditions, and (d) exercising its powers and duties.
XIII, Section 1(d)
Drainage Flow: States that “nothing shall be erected, planted or maintained to impede or interrupt said or normal drainage flow” in patio or yard areas that have been graded for drainage.
XIII, Section 4
Owner Maintenance and Association’s Right to Enter: Requires owners to keep their Lot in good order and repair. If an owner fails, the Association “shall have the right to enter upon said Lot or Patio to correct drainage and to repair, maintain and restore the Lot…” after providing notice to the owner and receiving approval from the Board.
Administrative Law Judge’s Findings and Rulings
The ALJ’s conclusions were consistent across both the initial decision and the rehearing. The Petitioner bore the burden of proving by a “preponderance of the evidence” that the Association violated the CC&Rs.
Key Findings from the Initial Decision (August 17, 2020)
• Right vs. Obligation: The judge’s central finding was that the Petitioner was “incorrect that the Respondent has an ‘obligation’ to enter the property.” The CC&Rs grant the Association a right to enter but do not impose a duty or obligation to do so.
• Lack of “True Emergency”: While Mr. Pick testified about water damage during rain, the judge noted a lack of testimony on the extent of the damage. The fact that over eight months had passed since the initial leak discovery indicated there was “no true emergency situation.”
• Stalemate and Business Judgment: The judge acknowledged the “stalemate” where the Petitioner could not obtain more proof without access, and the Association would not grant access without more proof. The Association’s decision was framed as an exercise of business judgment based on its determination that the submitted proof did not meet its standard for entry.
• Nature of the Dispute: The matter was characterized as a “neighbor versus neighbor dispute,” implying the Association was not the proper party to compel action.
• Conclusion: The Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof.
Key Findings from the Rehearing Decision (December 1, 2020)
• No New Evidence: The Petitioner “failed to provide new evidence or witness testimony” that would alter the original conclusion.
• Petitioner’s Concession: During the rehearing, the Petitioner “agreed that Respondent does not have an obligation to enter the property, only the right.”
• Respondent’s Compliance: The ALJ concluded that the Association “acted in compliance with the CC&Rs.” It was “receptive to the information provided by Petitioner and requested the neighboring property owners cooperation.” The lack of the neighbor’s full cooperation did not constitute a violation by the Association.
• Jurisdictional Limits: The judge stated that under statute A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(A), an ALJ can only order a party to abide by the community documents. The judge “cannot force the neighbor or the Respondent to grant access to the property.”
• Incorrect Venue: The decision noted that “it appears that Petitioner has or the incorrect venue and possibly party to grant the relief for which it seeks.”
Final Disposition
IT IS ORDERED that Petitioner’s petition in this matter be denied. The final decision from the rehearing on December 1, 2020, named the Respondent as the prevailing party and dismissed the Petitioner’s appeal. This order is binding on the parties, with any further appeal requiring judicial review in the superior court within thirty-five days of the order being served.
Study Guide – 20F-H2020057-REL-RHG
Study Guide: Abbass v. 10000 North Central Homeowners Association
This study guide provides a review of the administrative case involving Petitioner Susan E. Abbass and Respondent 10000 North Central Homeowners Association. It covers the initial hearing and the subsequent rehearing concerning an alleged violation of the Association’s governing documents. The materials are designed to test and deepen understanding of the case facts, legal arguments, and final rulings.
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Short-Answer Quiz
Instructions: Answer the following questions in 2-3 complete sentences, based on the information provided in the case documents.
1. Who are the primary parties in this case, and what are their respective roles?
2. What specific event on November 14, 2019, initiated the dispute between the Petitioner and her neighbor?
3. Identify the specific articles and sections of the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) that the Petitioner alleged the Respondent violated.
4. According to the Respondent’s property manager, Robert Kersten, what was required before the Association could authorize entry onto a member’s property?
5. What was the central legal distinction made by the Administrative Law Judge regarding the Association’s power to enter a property under the CC&Rs?
6. What was the outcome of the initial hearing on July 28, 2020, and what was the judge’s primary reason for this decision?
7. On what grounds did the Petitioner file her request for a rehearing after the initial decision?
8. Did the Petitioner present new evidence or testimony at the rehearing that changed the outcome? Explain briefly.
9. According to the Administrative Law Judge, what is the legal definition of “preponderance of the evidence”?
10. What limitations on the Administrative Law Judge’s authority are described in A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(A), and how did this affect the final order?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties are Susan E. Abbass, the Petitioner, and the 10000 North Central Homeowners Association, the Respondent. The Petitioner is a property owner and Association member who filed a complaint, while the Respondent is the homeowners’ association responsible for governing the community.
2. On or about November 14, 2019, Ronald Pick, who resides with the Petitioner, discovered that the carpet in their home office was completely soaked with water. He ultimately determined the drainage problem originated from the neighboring property, which sparked the dispute.
3. The Petitioner alleged that the Respondent violated Article XII, Section 6, as well as Article XIII, Sections 1(d) and 4 of the CC&Rs. These sections relate to the Association’s easement rights for inspection and maintenance, rules against impeding drainage flow, and an owner’s duty to keep their lot in good repair.
4. Robert Kersten testified that the Association could not authorize entrance onto another’s property “whenever they feel like it.” He stated there must be “reasonable justification” and “some type of proof” to allow for access, which he determined the Petitioner had not provided.
5. The Administrative Law Judge determined that the CC&Rs give the Respondent the right to enter a property for specific purposes, but they do not impose an obligation to do so. This distinction was crucial, as the judge concluded the Association was not required to act, even if it had the authority.
6. In the initial hearing, the judge denied the Petitioner’s petition. The primary reason was that the Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the Respondent had violated a provision of the CC&Rs.
7. The Petitioner requested a rehearing on the grounds that the initial findings of fact were “arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion” and that the decision was “not supported by the evidence or is contrary to law.”
8. No, the Petitioner failed to provide new evidence or witness testimony at the rehearing that demonstrated a violation by the Respondent. The judge concluded that the Petitioner again failed to sustain her burden of proof, leading to the dismissal of her appeal.
9. The judge cites two definitions for “preponderance of the evidence.” The first is “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.” The second, from Black’s Law Dictionary, is “The greater weight of the evidence… sufficient to incline a fair and impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the other.”
10. A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(A) states that the judge “may order any party to abide by the statutes, condominium documents, community documents or contract provision at issue.” The judge interpreted this to mean he could not force the Respondent or the neighbor to grant access to the property, as his only power was to order compliance with the CC&Rs, which had not been violated.
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Essay Questions
Instructions: The following questions are designed for longer, essay-style responses. Use the details from the case documents to construct a thorough and well-supported argument for each prompt. (Answers not provided).
1. Analyze the concept of “burden of proof” as it applies to this case. Explain what the Petitioner needed to demonstrate to prevail and detail the specific reasons cited by the Administrative Law Judge for why she failed to meet this standard in both the initial hearing and the rehearing.
2. Discuss the legal and practical reasoning behind the Respondent’s decision not to grant access to the neighboring property. Evaluate the “business judgment” defense, the potential liability concerns, and the characterization of the issue as a “neighbor versus neighbor dispute.”
3. Examine the distinction between a “right” and an “obligation” as interpreted by the Administrative Law Judge from the CC&Rs. How did this interpretation become the central pillar of the decisions in this case, and what does it reveal about the scope of a homeowners’ association’s power?
4. Trace the procedural history of this case from the initial filing of the petition to the final order after the rehearing. Identify each key date and procedural step, and explain the purpose and outcome of each stage of the administrative hearing process.
5. Imagine you are advising the Petitioner after the final decision. Based on the judge’s conclusions that the Petitioner was in the “incorrect venue and possibly party,” what alternative legal avenues might she pursue to resolve the underlying water leak issue? Use evidence from the text to support your suggestions.
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Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
An independent judge who presides over administrative hearings, hears evidence, and makes legal rulings and decisions, in this case for the Office of Administrative Hearings.
Arizona Department of Real Estate
The state agency in Arizona authorized by statute to receive and decide petitions for hearings involving disputes between homeowners and their homeowners’ associations.
Burden of Proof
The duty of a party in a legal proceeding to prove a disputed assertion or charge. In this case, the Petitioner had the burden to prove her claims by a preponderance of the evidence.
Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs)
The governing legal documents that set up the rules for a planned community or subdivision. The Petitioner alleged the Respondent violated specific articles within these documents.
Easement
A legal right to use another person’s land for a specific, limited purpose. In this case, Article XII Section 6 of the CC&Rs granted an easement to the Association for purposes such as inspection, maintenance, and correction of emergencies.
Jurisdiction
The official power to make legal decisions and judgments. The Arizona Department of Real Estate and the Office of Administrative Hearings had jurisdiction to hear and decide this case pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes.
Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)
An independent state agency in Arizona responsible for conducting evidentiary hearings for other state agencies, providing an impartial forum for disputes like the one in this case.
Petitioner
The party who files a petition initiating a legal action. In this matter, Susan E. Abbass was the Petitioner.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The standard of proof in most civil cases. It is defined in the text as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not” and as evidence with “the most convincing force.”
Prevailing Party
The party who wins a lawsuit or legal action. In the rehearing, the Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Respondent was the prevailing party.
Rehearing
A second hearing of a case to reconsider the issues and decision. A rehearing was granted in this case after the Petitioner claimed the initial decision was arbitrary, capricious, or not supported by evidence.
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed. In this matter, the 10000 North Central Homeowners Association was the Respondent.
Blog Post – 20F-H2020057-REL-RHG
Study Guide: Abbass v. 10000 North Central Homeowners Association
This study guide provides a review of the administrative case involving Petitioner Susan E. Abbass and Respondent 10000 North Central Homeowners Association. It covers the initial hearing and the subsequent rehearing concerning an alleged violation of the Association’s governing documents. The materials are designed to test and deepen understanding of the case facts, legal arguments, and final rulings.
——————————————————————————–
Short-Answer Quiz
Instructions: Answer the following questions in 2-3 complete sentences, based on the information provided in the case documents.
1. Who are the primary parties in this case, and what are their respective roles?
2. What specific event on November 14, 2019, initiated the dispute between the Petitioner and her neighbor?
3. Identify the specific articles and sections of the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) that the Petitioner alleged the Respondent violated.
4. According to the Respondent’s property manager, Robert Kersten, what was required before the Association could authorize entry onto a member’s property?
5. What was the central legal distinction made by the Administrative Law Judge regarding the Association’s power to enter a property under the CC&Rs?
6. What was the outcome of the initial hearing on July 28, 2020, and what was the judge’s primary reason for this decision?
7. On what grounds did the Petitioner file her request for a rehearing after the initial decision?
8. Did the Petitioner present new evidence or testimony at the rehearing that changed the outcome? Explain briefly.
9. According to the Administrative Law Judge, what is the legal definition of “preponderance of the evidence”?
10. What limitations on the Administrative Law Judge’s authority are described in A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(A), and how did this affect the final order?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties are Susan E. Abbass, the Petitioner, and the 10000 North Central Homeowners Association, the Respondent. The Petitioner is a property owner and Association member who filed a complaint, while the Respondent is the homeowners’ association responsible for governing the community.
2. On or about November 14, 2019, Ronald Pick, who resides with the Petitioner, discovered that the carpet in their home office was completely soaked with water. He ultimately determined the drainage problem originated from the neighboring property, which sparked the dispute.
3. The Petitioner alleged that the Respondent violated Article XII, Section 6, as well as Article XIII, Sections 1(d) and 4 of the CC&Rs. These sections relate to the Association’s easement rights for inspection and maintenance, rules against impeding drainage flow, and an owner’s duty to keep their lot in good repair.
4. Robert Kersten testified that the Association could not authorize entrance onto another’s property “whenever they feel like it.” He stated there must be “reasonable justification” and “some type of proof” to allow for access, which he determined the Petitioner had not provided.
5. The Administrative Law Judge determined that the CC&Rs give the Respondent the right to enter a property for specific purposes, but they do not impose an obligation to do so. This distinction was crucial, as the judge concluded the Association was not required to act, even if it had the authority.
6. In the initial hearing, the judge denied the Petitioner’s petition. The primary reason was that the Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the Respondent had violated a provision of the CC&Rs.
7. The Petitioner requested a rehearing on the grounds that the initial findings of fact were “arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion” and that the decision was “not supported by the evidence or is contrary to law.”
8. No, the Petitioner failed to provide new evidence or witness testimony at the rehearing that demonstrated a violation by the Respondent. The judge concluded that the Petitioner again failed to sustain her burden of proof, leading to the dismissal of her appeal.
9. The judge cites two definitions for “preponderance of the evidence.” The first is “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.” The second, from Black’s Law Dictionary, is “The greater weight of the evidence… sufficient to incline a fair and impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the other.”
10. A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(A) states that the judge “may order any party to abide by the statutes, condominium documents, community documents or contract provision at issue.” The judge interpreted this to mean he could not force the Respondent or the neighbor to grant access to the property, as his only power was to order compliance with the CC&Rs, which had not been violated.
——————————————————————————–
Essay Questions
Instructions: The following questions are designed for longer, essay-style responses. Use the details from the case documents to construct a thorough and well-supported argument for each prompt. (Answers not provided).
1. Analyze the concept of “burden of proof” as it applies to this case. Explain what the Petitioner needed to demonstrate to prevail and detail the specific reasons cited by the Administrative Law Judge for why she failed to meet this standard in both the initial hearing and the rehearing.
2. Discuss the legal and practical reasoning behind the Respondent’s decision not to grant access to the neighboring property. Evaluate the “business judgment” defense, the potential liability concerns, and the characterization of the issue as a “neighbor versus neighbor dispute.”
3. Examine the distinction between a “right” and an “obligation” as interpreted by the Administrative Law Judge from the CC&Rs. How did this interpretation become the central pillar of the decisions in this case, and what does it reveal about the scope of a homeowners’ association’s power?
4. Trace the procedural history of this case from the initial filing of the petition to the final order after the rehearing. Identify each key date and procedural step, and explain the purpose and outcome of each stage of the administrative hearing process.
5. Imagine you are advising the Petitioner after the final decision. Based on the judge’s conclusions that the Petitioner was in the “incorrect venue and possibly party,” what alternative legal avenues might she pursue to resolve the underlying water leak issue? Use evidence from the text to support your suggestions.
——————————————————————————–
Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
An independent judge who presides over administrative hearings, hears evidence, and makes legal rulings and decisions, in this case for the Office of Administrative Hearings.
Arizona Department of Real Estate
The state agency in Arizona authorized by statute to receive and decide petitions for hearings involving disputes between homeowners and their homeowners’ associations.
Burden of Proof
The duty of a party in a legal proceeding to prove a disputed assertion or charge. In this case, the Petitioner had the burden to prove her claims by a preponderance of the evidence.
Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs)
The governing legal documents that set up the rules for a planned community or subdivision. The Petitioner alleged the Respondent violated specific articles within these documents.
Easement
A legal right to use another person’s land for a specific, limited purpose. In this case, Article XII Section 6 of the CC&Rs granted an easement to the Association for purposes such as inspection, maintenance, and correction of emergencies.
Jurisdiction
The official power to make legal decisions and judgments. The Arizona Department of Real Estate and the Office of Administrative Hearings had jurisdiction to hear and decide this case pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes.
Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH)
An independent state agency in Arizona responsible for conducting evidentiary hearings for other state agencies, providing an impartial forum for disputes like the one in this case.
Petitioner
The party who files a petition initiating a legal action. In this matter, Susan E. Abbass was the Petitioner.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The standard of proof in most civil cases. It is defined in the text as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not” and as evidence with “the most convincing force.”
Prevailing Party
The party who wins a lawsuit or legal action. In the rehearing, the Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Respondent was the prevailing party.
Rehearing
A second hearing of a case to reconsider the issues and decision. A rehearing was granted in this case after the Petitioner claimed the initial decision was arbitrary, capricious, or not supported by evidence.
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed. In this matter, the 10000 North Central Homeowners Association was the Respondent.
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Susan E Abbass(petitioner)
Ronald Pick(witness) witness for Petitioner
Respondent Side
Blake Johnson(HOA attorney) Brown Olcott, PLLC
Robert Kersten(property manager) witness for Respondent
Kelly Oetinger(HOA attorney) Brown Olcott, PLLC
Neutral Parties
Adam D. Stone(ALJ)
Judy Lowe(Commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate
The Administrative Law Judge ruled that Solera was in compliance with its governing documents, specifically CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, concluding that the Board is the 'sole judge' regarding appropriate maintenance of AREAS. The Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof, and the Rehearing Petition was dismissed.
Why this result: Petitioner failed to sustain her burden to establish a violation. The governing documents grant the Board 'the sole judge' authority over maintenance, and Petitioner did not provide legal support requiring the HOA to meet the homeowner maintenance standard.
Key Issues & Findings
Failure to maintain Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times
Petitioner alleged that Solera failed to maintain Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times, arguing that the same strict maintenance standard applied to homeowners (CC&R 7.2) should apply to the HOA (CC&R 7.1). The issue was heard on rehearing after the initial decision dismissed the petition.
Orders: The Administrative Law Judge concluded Solera was in compliance with its governing documents and was the prevailing party. Petitioner's appeal (Rehearing Petition) was dismissed.
Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No
Disposition: petitioner_loss
Cited:
A.R.S. 33-1801 et seq.
A.R.S. §§ 32-2102
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199 et al.
A.R.S. § 32-2199.05
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199(2)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.01(D)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.02
A.R.S. § 41-1092
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2
CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-116
Analytics Highlights
Topics: HOA Dispute, CC&R Violation, Maintenance Standard, Areas of Association Responsibility, Rehearing, Sole Judge
Additional Citations:
A.R.S. 33-1801 et seq.
A.R.S. §§ 32-2102
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199 et al.
A.R.S. § 32-2199.05
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199(2)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.01(D)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.02
A.R.S. § 41-1092
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2
CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-116
Video Overview
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
20F-H2020051-REL Decision – 816310.pdf
Uploaded 2025-12-09T10:05:44 (199.6 KB)
20F-H2020051-REL Decision – 847175.pdf
Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:35:07 (246.5 KB)
Briefing Doc – 20F-H2020051-REL
Briefing Document: Morin v. Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the findings from the Administrative Law Judge Rehearing Decision in the case of Debra K. Morin versus the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (Solera), dated January 8, 2021. The central dispute involved a homeowner’s allegation that the association failed to maintain its common areas in good condition and repair.
The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) ultimately dismissed the petitioner’s case, finding conclusively in favor of the Solera HOA. The decision rested on a critical provision within the association’s Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs), which designates the Solera Board as the “sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement” of all common areas. This clause grants the Board exclusive discretion, superseding an individual homeowner’s opinion on the timing or quality of maintenance.
Despite the petitioner presenting extensive photographic evidence documenting various maintenance issues, the ALJ concluded that this evidence failed to prove a violation of the governing documents. The petitioner did not meet her burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the Board had acted outside its granted authority. The ruling affirms that the authority of the Board is explicitly elevated above that of an individual homeowner in matters of common area maintenance under the controlling legal documents.
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I. Case Background and Procedural History
The case originates from a petition filed by Debra K. Morin, a four-year resident of the Solera community, against the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association. The matter was adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (Tribunal).
A. Initial Petition
On March 12, 2020, Ms. Morin filed a two-issue petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate, alleging that Solera, its Board of Directors, and its management company (Premier) had violated numerous governing documents, including the Articles of Incorporation, By-Laws, CC&Rs, and Rules & Regulations (R&Rs).
• Issue #1: Alleged that Solera did not permit “direct communication from homeowners” and sought to have this “policy” rescinded.
• Issue #2: Alleged that Solera was not providing oversight to the General Manager in maintaining the “Areas of Association Responsibility” (AREAS) in “good condition and repair at all times.” Specific complaints included uncontrolled weeds and poor maintenance of the Community Center and other common areas.
B. Procedural Developments
• Motion to Dismiss: Solera filed a Motion to Dismiss, arguing the issues were outside the Department of Real Estate’s jurisdiction.
• Withdrawal of Issue #1: At a May 20, 2020 hearing, the Tribunal noted its jurisdiction did not extend to non-governing documents like the Board’s Code of Ethics. Consequently, Ms. Morin withdrew Issue #1. The Tribunal denied the Motion to Dismiss for the remaining “bare-bones” maintenance allegation in Issue #2.
• Initial Decision (August 19, 2020): Following the original hearing, the ALJ issued a decision concluding that Solera was the “sole judge” regarding maintenance of the AREAS and had not violated its governing documents. The petition was dismissed.
• Rehearing Request (September 24, 2020): Ms. Morin filed a request for rehearing, citing irregularities in the proceedings, misconduct by the prevailing party, and arguing the decision was arbitrary and capricious, particularly in its interpretation of CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1.
• Rehearing Granted and Conducted: The Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate granted the rehearing, which was conducted telephonically on December 16, 2020.
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II. Core Arguments of the Parties
The fundamental conflict centered on the interpretation of the maintenance standards outlined in the community’s CC&Rs.
A. Petitioner’s Position (Debra K. Morin)
Ms. Morin’s case was built on the principle of equal application of maintenance standards.
• Central Argument: The same maintenance standard requiring homeowners to keep their lots “in good condition and repair at all times” (per CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2) must be applied equally to Solera’s responsibility for the common AREAS (per CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1).
• Core Belief: Because homeowners are given no discretion regarding delays in maintenance, Solera should not be able to take months to address reported issues.
• Evidence Presented: The petitioner submitted extensive documentation, including over 80 photographs (referenced in the rehearing as “310 pictures”), emails, and other documents. This evidence was intended to show persistent maintenance failures, including:
◦ Uncontrolled weeds in granite rock locations
◦ Poor exterior condition of the Community Center
◦ Deficiencies in street asphalt, storm drains, sidewalks, and curbing
◦ Water pooling and intrusion issues
◦ Exposed landscaping lights and irrigation lines
◦ Unremoved tree stumps
B. Respondent’s Position (Solera HOA)
Solera’s defense relied entirely on the specific authority granted to its Board by the governing documents.
• Central Argument: The association met its responsibilities, and the petitioner’s subjective opinions about what, when, or how maintenance should be done are irrelevant.
• Dispositive Legal Provision: Solera consistently cited CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, which states the Board “shall be the sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement of all [AREAS].”
• Interpretation: This provision grants the Board exclusive discretion and authority to determine the nature and timing of maintenance, insulating its decisions from a single homeowner’s critique.
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III. Analysis and Key Findings of the Administrative Law Judge
The Rehearing Decision provided a thorough review of the evidence and legal arguments, ultimately reinforcing the original ruling in favor of Solera.
A. The “Sole Judge” Clause and Board Authority
The ALJ’s conclusion hinged on the unambiguous language of the CC&Rs, which establishes a clear hierarchy of authority.
• CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1: This article was identified as the dispositive text. It states, in pertinent part: “the Board ‘shall be the sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement of all [AREAS], but all [AREAS], and the Improvements located thereon, shall be maintained in good condition and repair at all times.'” The ALJ found that the “sole judge” provision grants the Board exclusive authority to determine how the “good condition and repair” standard is met.
• CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5: This section further strengthens the Board’s position by granting Solera the “exclusive right to construe and interpret the provisions of the [CC&Rs],” with its interpretation being “final, conclusive and binding.”
• Conclusion on Authority: The ALJ concluded that these provisions clearly lift the Board’s authority above that of an individual homeowner in determining appropriate maintenance.
B. Rejection of the “Equal Standard” Argument
The petitioner’s primary argument for an equal, non-discretionary standard for both the HOA and homeowners was explicitly rejected.
• The ALJ found that the petitioner “failed to provide legal support for her argument that the same maintenance standard is required to be applied to the Board as it is applied to a homeowner.”
• The governing documents themselves create different levels of authority and obligation for the Board versus individual owners.
C. Evaluation of Evidence and Burden of Proof
• Burden of Proof: The decision reiterates that the petitioner bears the burden of proving a violation by a “preponderance of the evidence.”
• Photographic Evidence: The ALJ acknowledged reviewing all photographs from both hearings. The decision states that this evidence successfully documented “the existence, at those dates embedded in the photographs, of items that deal with maintenance and repairs in various locations of Solera AREAS.”
• Failure to Prove a Violation: Crucially, while the photos proved maintenance issues existed, they did not prove a violation of the CC&Rs. Because the Board is the “sole judge,” the existence of a weed or a cracked curb does not automatically constitute a breach of its duties, as the Board retains discretion over the timeline and method of repair.
D. Jurisdictional Limitations
The decision affirmed the Tribunal’s limited jurisdiction, noting that many of the petitioner’s underlying frustrations were not legally actionable in this venue.
• Not Actionable: A homeowner’s dissatisfaction with the Board, its management company, or the General Manager is “not within the purview of this process or the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.”
• Irrelevant Documents: Arguments based on City of Chandler standards, the landscaping contract with Integrated Landscape Management (ILM), or Premier’s General Manager job description were deemed irrelevant, as the Tribunal’s review is limited to the association’s governing documents and applicable state statutes.
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IV. Final Order and Conclusion
Based on an exhaustive review of the record from both the original hearing and the rehearing, the Administrative Law Judge reached a definitive conclusion.
• Final Finding: The petitioner failed to sustain her burden of proof to establish a violation by Solera of the governing documents. The ALJ concluded that Solera is in compliance with its governing documents, including CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1.
• Order:
◦ IT IS ORDERED that Solera is the prevailing party with regard to the Rehearing, and Petitioner’s appeal is dismissed.
◦ The order was issued on January 8, 2021.
◦ As a decision issued after a rehearing, the order is binding on the parties. Any further appeal must be filed with the Superior Court within 35 days from the date of service.
Study Guide – 20F-H2020051-REL
Study Guide: Morin v. Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc.
This guide provides a comprehensive review of the administrative rehearing case No. 20F-H2020051-REL-RHG, between Petitioner Debra K. Morin and Respondent Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. It includes a short-answer quiz, an answer key, suggested essay questions, and a glossary of key terms derived from the case documents.
Short-Answer Quiz
Answer each of the following questions in 2-3 sentences based on the information provided in the case decision.
1. Who were the primary parties in this case, and who represented them at the telephonic hearing on December 16, 2020?
2. What were the two initial issues Petitioner Debra K. Morin raised in her petition filed on March 12, 2020?
3. Why did the Petitioner withdraw Issue #1 from her petition during the May 20, 2020 hearing?
4. What was the Petitioner’s central argument regarding the maintenance standard that Solera should be held to?
5. What type of evidence did the Petitioner primarily present to document the alleged maintenance failures in the Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS)?
6. What specific clause in the CC&Rs did Solera (the Respondent) rely on to defend its actions and decisions regarding maintenance?
7. What were the primary reasons the Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate granted the Petitioner’s request for a rehearing?
8. How did the Administrative Law Judge rule on the relevance of non-governing documents, such as the City of Chandler ordinances and the Premier Management Company job description?
9. What is the legal standard of proof that a petitioner must meet in these proceedings, and how is it defined in the decision?
10. What was the final conclusion and order of the Administrative Law Judge in the Rehearing Decision issued on January 8, 2021?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties were the Petitioner, Debra K. Morin, who represented herself, and the Respondent, Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association (Solera). Solera was represented by Lydia Linsmeier, Esq.
2. Issue #1 alleged that Solera did not allow direct communication from homeowners. Issue #2 alleged that Solera, its Board, and its management company were not providing proper oversight to maintain the Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair.
3. The Petitioner withdrew Issue #1 after the Tribunal ruled that the statutory parameters of its jurisdiction did not include the interpretation or application of a non-governing document like the Board’s Code of Ethics. The allegations regarding ethics and mismanagement based on this code were therefore removed from consideration.
4. The Petitioner’s central argument was that the same maintenance standard must be applied to Solera as is applied to homeowners. She contended that just as homeowners are required by CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2 to maintain their lots in good condition at all times, Solera must be held to the same standard for common AREAS under CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1.
5. The Petitioner presented an “enormity” of photographic evidence to document the maintenance issues. The decision notes she presented over eighty photographs at the original hearing and an additional “310 pictures” were mentioned in the rehearing, showing weeds, debris, exposed wiring, and other issues at various dates.
6. Solera relied on CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, which states that the Solera Board of Directors “shall be the sole judge as to the appropriate maintenance, repair and replacement of all [AREAS].” Solera argued that the Petitioner’s subjective opinions on maintenance were therefore not relevant.
7. The rehearing was granted for reasons outlined in the Petitioner’s request, which claimed: irregularities in the proceedings, misconduct by the prevailing party, and that the original decision was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, not supported by evidence, or contrary to law.
8. The Judge ruled that such documents were not relevant or justiciable. City standards were not under review, and the management company’s job description and landscape contract were not Solera governing documents, so they could not be used to prove a violation of the association’s governing documents.
9. The petitioner bears the burden of proving their case by a “preponderance of the evidence.” This is defined as proof that convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not, and it represents the greater weight of evidence.
10. The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to sustain her burden to establish a violation by Solera of the governing documents. The Judge found Solera to be the prevailing party, in compliance with CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, and ordered that the Petitioner’s appeal be dismissed.
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Suggested Essay Questions
The following questions are designed to encourage deeper analysis of the case. No answers are provided.
1. Analyze the balance of power between a homeowner and an HOA as depicted in this case. Discuss how specific clauses in the CC&Rs, particularly Article 7 (Section 7.1) and Article 9 (Sections 9.5 and 9.9), grant authority to the Board and limit the recourse available to an individual owner within the association’s own framework.
2. Examine the role and limitations of evidence in this administrative hearing. Why was the Petitioner’s photographic evidence, despite its volume, ultimately insufficient to meet the burden of proof? Discuss the distinction made by the Tribunal between evidence of a maintenance issue and evidence of a violation of the governing documents.
3. The Petitioner argued for an equal application of the “maintenance standard” to both homeowners and the HOA, stating “[t]here must be equal consideration to have a valid contract.” Evaluate this argument in the context of the specific language found in the Solera CC&Rs. Is the concept of “equal consideration” legally applicable in the way the Petitioner suggests?
4. Discuss the jurisdiction of the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (the Tribunal) in HOA disputes as described in the decision. Explain why the Tribunal could rule on the maintenance of common areas but had to dismiss claims related to the Solera Code of Ethics, City of Chandler ordinances, and Premier Management’s internal documents.
5. Based on the findings of fact, trace the procedural journey of this case from the initial petition to the final rehearing order. Identify the key turning points, such as the Motion to Dismiss and the Order Granting Rehearing, and explain their impact on the scope and outcome of the dispute.
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Glossary of Key Terms
Definition from Source Context
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
The judicial authority, in this case Kay Abramsohn, who presides over hearings at the Office of Administrative Hearings, makes findings of fact, issues decisions, and conducts rehearings.
Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS)
The common areas within the Solera community that the homeowners’ association is responsible for managing and maintaining. This includes landscaping, the Community Center exterior, street conditions, storm drains, sidewalks, walls, and curbing.
Articles of Incorporation
One of the governing documents of the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, referenced as Solera Exhibit A.
By-Laws
One of the governing documents of the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, referenced as Solera Exhibit B.
CC&Rs (Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions)
A primary governing document for the Solera at Springfield Lakes community. It outlines the rights and responsibilities of both the homeowners and the association.
Maintenance Standard
Defined in CC&R Article 1, Section 1.30 as “the standard of maintenance of Improvements established from time to time by the Board and/or the Architectural Review Committee in the Design Guidelines, or in the absence of any such standards, the standards of maintenance of Improvements generally prevailing through the Project.”
Motion to Dismiss
A formal request filed by a party (in this case, Solera) asking for a petition or case to be dismissed on the grounds that the issues are outside the Department’s jurisdiction or that the requested relief cannot be granted as a matter of law.
Petitioner
The party who initiates a legal action or petition. In this case, Debra K. Morin, a homeowner in the Solera community.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The standard of proof required for a petitioner to win in these proceedings. It is defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
Premier Management Company (Premier)
The management company hired by the Solera Board of Directors to handle duties including the oversight of a General Manager.
Project Documents
Defined in CC&R Article 1, Section 1.37 as the CC&Rs, any supplements to the CC&Rs, the By-Laws, the Rules and Regulations (R&Rs), and the Design Guidelines.
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed. In this case, the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc.
R&Rs (Rules and Regulations)
One of the governing documents of the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, referenced as Solera Exhibit D.
Tribunal
A term used to refer to the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH), the body responsible for conducting administrative hearings for disputes referred by the Arizona Department of Real Estate.
Blog Post – 20F-H2020051-REL
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20F-H2020051-REL-RHG
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This document presents an Administrative Law Judge Rehearing Decision regarding a dispute between Debra K. Morin (Petitioner) and the Solera Chandler Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (Respondent). The Petitioner initially filed a two-issue complaint with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging that the HOA had violated various governing documents, primarily concerning lack of direct homeowner communication and a failure to maintain Association Responsibility Areas (AREAS) in good condition. After the first issue was withdrawn due to jurisdictional limitations, the initial decision dismissed the petition, finding the HOA was the sole judge of appropriate maintenance under the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs). This rehearing decision, granted due to claims of procedural irregularities and arbitrary findings, ultimately reaffirms the original dismissal, concluding that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof to establish a violation of the governing documents.
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Debra K. Morin(petitioner) Represented herself
Respondent Side
Lydia A. Perce Linsmeier(HOA attorney) CARPENTER, HAZLEWOOD, DELGADO & BOLEN LLP Represented Solera Chandler Homeowners' Association
Denise Frazier(general manager/witness) Premier Management Company / Solera Chandler Homeowners' Association Solera's onsite general manager who testified
Neutral Parties
Kay Abramsohn(ALJ) Office of Administrative Hearings Administrative Law Judge for both original and rehearing decisions
Judy Lowe(Commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate
Felicia Del Sol(administrative) Transmitted the original August 19, 2020 Decision
The Administrative Law Judge ruled that Solera was in compliance with its governing documents, specifically CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1, concluding that the Board is the 'sole judge' regarding appropriate maintenance of AREAS. The Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof, and the Rehearing Petition was dismissed.
Why this result: Petitioner failed to sustain her burden to establish a violation. The governing documents grant the Board 'the sole judge' authority over maintenance, and Petitioner did not provide legal support requiring the HOA to meet the homeowner maintenance standard.
Key Issues & Findings
Failure to maintain Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times
Petitioner alleged that Solera failed to maintain Areas of Association Responsibility (AREAS) in good condition and repair at all times, arguing that the same strict maintenance standard applied to homeowners (CC&R 7.2) should apply to the HOA (CC&R 7.1). The issue was heard on rehearing after the initial decision dismissed the petition.
Orders: The Administrative Law Judge concluded Solera was in compliance with its governing documents and was the prevailing party. Petitioner's appeal (Rehearing Petition) was dismissed.
Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No
Disposition: petitioner_loss
Cited:
A.R.S. 33-1801 et seq.
A.R.S. §§ 32-2102
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199 et al.
A.R.S. § 32-2199.05
A.R.S. §§ 32-2199(2)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.01(D)
A.R.S. § 32-2199.02
A.R.S. § 41-1092
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.1
CC&R Article 7, Section 7.2
CC&R Article 9, Section 9.5
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-116
Analytics Highlights
Topics: HOA Dispute, CC&R Violation, Maintenance Standard, Areas of Association Responsibility, Rehearing, Sole Judge
A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1); CC&Rs Part 10, Section 10.4
Outcome Summary
Petitioner was deemed the prevailing party after establishing that the Respondent HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1) and the community documents by improperly recording Amended CC&Rs without proper owner consent. The Respondent was ordered to refund the $500.00 filing fee. However, the ALJ could not grant the requested relief (rescission of the Amended CC&Rs) due to a lack of statutory authority.
Key Issues & Findings
Violation regarding the validity of Amended CC&Rs due to lack of required owner approval.
The Petitioner alleged that the Amended CC&Rs recorded by the Board were invalid because they were not approved by two-thirds (2/3) of the lot owners as required by the CC&Rs and statute. The ALJ agreed, finding the Board acted improperly and violated the documents and statute.
Orders: Respondent was ordered to pay Petitioner the filing fee of $500.00. No civil penalty was assessed. The ALJ determined she lacked the statutory authority to order the rescission of the Amended CC&Rs requested by the Petitioner.
Briefing Document: Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Executive Summary
This briefing analyzes the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decision in the case of Douglas J. Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association (No. 20F-H2020041-REL). The central issue was whether the HOA Board had the authority to unilaterally amend and record changes to the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) without the required homeowner vote.
The petitioner, Douglas J. Karolak, successfully argued that the HOA violated its own governing documents and Arizona state law by filing “Amended CC&Rs” on October 5, 2018, without securing the approval of two-thirds of the lot owners. The HOA contended its actions were a valid exercise of its authority to create “Association Rules.”
ALJ Tammy L. Eigenheer ruled decisively in favor of the petitioner. The decision established a clear legal distinction between the Board’s power to adopt rules and the separate, more stringent process required to formally amend the CC&Rs. The judge found the Board acted improperly, declaring Karolak the prevailing party and ordering the HOA to reimburse his $500 filing fee. Notably, while the judge found the amended document was improperly recorded, she concluded she lacked the statutory authority to order its rescission, which was the remedy the petitioner had requested.
Case Overview
Case Name
Douglas J. Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Case Number
20F-H2020041-REL
Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings
Administrative Law Judge
Tammy L. Eigenheer
Hearing Date
May 1, 2020
Decision Date
May 21, 2020
The Central Dispute
The core of the dispute revolved around the legitimacy of a document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates” (Amended CC&Rs), which the HOA Board recorded with the Pinal County Recorder on October 5, 2018.
• Petitioner’s Position (Douglas J. Karolak): The Amended CC&Rs are invalid because they were not approved by “owners of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the Lots,” a requirement explicitly stated in Section 10.4 of the original CC&Rs and supported by Arizona statute A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1). Karolak argued that the Board’s action of recording an amendment is fundamentally different from its power to adopt internal “Association Rules.”
• Respondent’s Position (VVE – Casa Grande HOA): The Board argued that its actions were a valid exercise of the authority granted to it under the CC&Rs. It claimed that because the only changes were to Part 7 (Use Restrictions), they fell under the Board’s power to “adopt, amend, or repeal such rules and regulations as it deems reasonable and appropriate” (Section 3.4) and to “modify or waive the foregoing restrictions… by reasonable rules and regulations” (Section 7.43). The Respondent’s counsel did, however, concede that “perhaps the Amended CC&Rs should not have been recorded.”
Factual Background and Chronology
• The VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association is a 56-lot community in Casa Grande, Arizona, with 19 lots remaining vacant at the time of the hearing.
• April 30, 1999: The original “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for VVE” (CC&Rs) was recorded.
• 2014 and 2015: The HOA Board made unsuccessful attempts to amend the CC&Rs through membership votes.
• 2018: Following the failed votes, the Board determined it would make changes to the “rules section” of the CC&Rs under the authority it believed was granted by Section 3.4.
• October 5, 2018: The Board recorded the Amended CC&Rs with the Pinal County Recorder. The HOA acknowledged that these amendments had not been approved by the required two-thirds of lot owners.
Legal Analysis and Key Provisions
The decision rested on the interpretation of specific sections of the community’s CC&Rs and Arizona state law. The judge concluded that the document’s structure clearly separates the process of rulemaking from the process of formal amendment.
Provision
Source
Summary of Stipulation
Amendment Process
CC&Rs Section 10.4
Requires an instrument “executed by the Owners of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the Lots” and recorded to become effective.
Rulemaking Authority
CC&Rs Section 3.4
Empowers the Board to adopt, amend, or repeal “Association Rules” governing the use of the property. States rules have the “same force and effect as if they were set forth in” the CC&Rs.
Statutory Requirement
A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)
Provides that a declaration may be amended by the association via an affirmative vote or written consent of the number of owners specified in the declaration.
The judge’s rationale emphasized that the distinct sections for rulemaking (3.4) and amendments (10.4) demonstrate that the original drafters did not intend for the Board to have the power to unilaterally amend the CC&Rs. The judge stated, “The fact that the two topics are covered as separate topics in the CC&Rs leads to the conclusion that the original drafters of the CC&Rs did not contemplate that the Board had the authority to, on its own, amend the CC&Rs.”
The Court’s Decision and Final Order
The Administrative Law Judge ruled that the petitioner, Douglas J. Karolak, had successfully proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the respondent HOA had acted improperly.
Key Findings:
• The HOA Board did not have the authority to amend the CC&Rs without the approval of two-thirds of the lot owners.
• The Board’s action of recording the Amended CC&Rs on October 5, 2018, was a violation of the community’s governing documents (Section 10.4) and Arizona state law (A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)).
• The Board’s ability to create “Association Rules” is a separate and distinct process from the formal procedure required to amend the Declaration.
Final Order:
• The petitioner, Douglas J. Karolak, was deemed the prevailing party.
• The respondent HOA was ordered to pay the petitioner his $500.00 filing fee within thirty days of the order.
• No civil penalty was found to be appropriate in the matter.
• Critically, the judge determined that under the applicable statute (A.R.S. § 32-2199.02), the Administrative Law Judge does not have the authority to order the Amended CC&Rs rescinded, despite this being the remedy requested by the petitioner.
The order is binding on both parties unless a request for rehearing is filed with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the decision.
Study Guide – 20F-H2020041-REL
Study Guide: Karolak v. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
This guide is designed to review the key facts, legal arguments, and outcomes of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in the case of Douglas J. Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association (No. 20F-H2020041-REL).
Short-Answer Quiz
Instructions: Answer the following questions in two to three complete sentences, drawing all information directly from the provided legal decision.
1. Who were the petitioner and the respondent in this case, and what was the petitioner’s core allegation?
2. What specific statute and section of the community documents did the petitioner claim the respondent violated?
3. According to Section 10.4 of the original CC&Rs, what was the required procedure for amending the Declaration?
4. Under what authority did the VVE – Casa Grande HOA Board claim it could make changes to the community documents without a membership vote?
5. What key event occurred on or about October 5, 2018, that became the central point of the dispute?
6. What was the respondent’s primary argument for why their actions were valid?
7. What is the “preponderance of the evidence,” and which party bears the burden of proof to establish a violation?
8. Why did the Administrative Law Judge conclude that the Board’s authority to create “Association Rules” was a separate process from amending the CC&Rs?
9. What remedy did the petitioner request, and why was it not granted by the Administrative Law Judge?
10. What was the final order issued by the Judge in this case?
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Answer Key
1. The petitioner was Douglas J. Karolak, a homeowner. The respondent was the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association. Karolak’s core allegation was that the HOA had improperly amended the community’s governing documents.
2. The petitioner alleged a violation of Arizona Revised Statute (A.R.S.) § 33-1817(A)(1). He also claimed a violation of Part 10, Section 10.4 of the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).
3. Section 10.4 of the CC&Rs stipulated that the Declaration could be amended by an instrument executed by the owners of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the lots. The amendment would not be effective until that instrument was officially recorded.
4. The HOA Board claimed it had the authority to make the changes under Section 3.4 of the CC&Rs. This section empowered the Board to adopt, amend, or repeal “Association Rules” as it deemed reasonable and appropriate.
5. On or about October 5, 2018, the Board recorded a document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates” (Amended CC&Rs) with the Pinal County Recorder. This was done without the required two-thirds vote from the lot owners.
6. The respondent argued that because the only changes made were to Part 7 (Use Restrictions), which fell under the type of rules the Board was authorized to adopt, the Amended CC&Rs were a valid exercise of the Board’s authority. Their counsel did acknowledge, however, that perhaps the document should not have been recorded.
7. A “preponderance of the evidence” is proof that convinces the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not. The petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that the respondent committed the alleged violations by this standard.
8. The Judge concluded they were separate processes because the CC&Rs cover the topics in different sections. This separation led the Judge to believe the original drafters did not intend for the Board to have the authority to amend the CC&Rs on its own.
9. The petitioner requested that the improperly recorded Amended CC&Rs be rescinded. This remedy was not granted because the applicable statute, A.R.S. § 32-2199.02, does not give the Administrative Law Judge the specific authority to order a document rescinded.
10. The final order deemed the petitioner the prevailing party. It further ordered the respondent to repay the petitioner his $500.00 filing fee within thirty days, but found that no civil penalty was appropriate.
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Essay Questions
Instructions: The following questions are designed to promote deeper analysis of the case. Formulate a comprehensive response to each, using only the information presented in the legal decision.
1. Analyze the distinction made by the Administrative Law Judge between the Board’s authority to create “Association Rules” under Section 3.4 and the process for amending the Declaration under Section 10.4. Why was this distinction critical to the case’s outcome?
2. Discuss the legal standard of “preponderance of the evidence” as defined in the decision. How did the petitioner successfully meet this burden of proof to establish the respondent’s violation, and what specific facts supported this conclusion?
3. Examine the respondent’s (HOA’s) argument regarding its authority to amend the CC&Rs. What were the fundamental flaws in this argument, and how did their counsel’s acknowledgment about the recording of the Amended CC&Rs potentially weaken their position?
4. Explain the legal framework governing this dispute, citing the specific Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) mentioned in the decision. Detail the roles of the Arizona Department of Real Estate, the Office of Administrative Hearings, and the Administrative Law Judge in resolving this type of HOA conflict.
5. Evaluate the final Order of the Administrative Law Judge. While the petitioner was deemed the prevailing party, why was their requested remedy (rescission of the Amended CC&Rs) denied? What does this reveal about the specific limits of the Administrative Law Judge’s authority in such cases under A.R.S. § 32-2199.02?
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Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
An official who presides over administrative hearings. In this case, Tammy L. Eigenheer of the Office of Administrative Hearings made the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and issued the final order.
A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)
The specific Arizona Revised Statute cited by the petitioner. It states that a declaration may be amended by the association with an affirmative vote or written consent of the number of owners specified in the declaration.
Amended CC&Rs
The document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates,” which the HOA Board recorded on October 5, 2018, without the required two-thirds owner approval.
Association Rules
Rules and regulations that the HOA Board is empowered to adopt, amend, or repeal under Section 3.4 of the CC&Rs to govern the use of Common Areas and other parts of the Project. The Board argued their changes fell under this authority.
Burden of Proof
The obligation to prove one’s assertion. In this case, the petitioner bore the burden of proof to establish the respondent’s violations by a preponderance of the evidence.
An acronym for Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions. These are the governing legal documents for a planned community. The original “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for VVE” was recorded on April 30, 1999.
Department
Refers to the Arizona Department of Real Estate, the agency with which the petitioner filed his Homeowners Association (HOA) Dispute Process Petition.
An acronym for Homeowners Association. In this case, the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association, an association of 56 lot owners in Casa Grande, Arizona.
Office of Administrative Hearings
The office responsible for conducting hearings for disputes filed with state agencies like the Department of Real Estate.
Petitioner
The party who initiates a legal action or petition. In this case, homeowner Douglas J. Karolak.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The evidentiary standard required to win the case, defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed. In this case, the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association.
Blog Post – 20F-H2020041-REL
Your HOA Just Changed the Rules? Why This Homeowner’s $500 Victory is a Warning to Everyone
For millions of Americans, living in a planned community means living under the authority of a Homeowners Association (HOA). While intended to protect property values, these relationships can often feel one-sided, with boards issuing mandates and homeowners feeling powerless to push back. It’s a common frustration, but it’s rare to see a single homeowner challenge their board and force a legal reckoning.
A recent case from Arizona, Douglas J. Karolak versus the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association, provides a critical case study in board overreach and the surprising limits of legal victory. Karolak alleged his HOA board violated its own governing documents and state law by improperly changing the community’s core rules.
He took his case to an administrative law judge and, in a significant ruling, he won. But the outcome of this seemingly straightforward dispute was far from simple. The final decision reveals a shocking twist that holds critical lessons for every homeowner about the difference between being right on paper and getting the remedy you actually want.
There’s a Huge Difference Between a ‘Rule Change’ and a ‘Declaration Amendment’
The first lesson from this case is a critical one for every homeowner: understand the constitutional hierarchy of your community’s documents. The core of the dispute was the HOA Board’s attempt to amend its foundational document, the CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions), without getting the required approval from the homeowners.
Here are the key facts of the case:
• The Original Rule: The community’s CC&Rs explicitly stated in Section 10.4 that any amendment required a vote and execution by “at least two-thirds (2/3) of the Lots.” This is the highest level of authority in a planned community, akin to a constitution.
• The Failed Attempts: The Board had tried to get this two-thirds vote in both 2014 and 2015, but was unsuccessful.
• The Workaround: In 2018, the Board decided to bypass the homeowners. It used a separate power granted in Section 3.4 of the CC&Rs—the authority to create day-to-day “Association Rules”—to make what it called changes to the “‘rules section’ of the CC&Rs, specifically targeting the Use Restrictions in Part 7.”
The judge’s conclusion was crystal clear: The CC&Rs were drafted to treat the power to create “rules” and the power to “amend” the declaration as two entirely separate processes. This separation acts as a crucial check on the board’s power, preventing a small group from unilaterally changing the fundamental property rights of all owners. As the judge noted, “the original drafters of the CC&Rs did not contemplate that the Board had the authority to, on its own, amend the CC&Rs.”
Recording a Document Doesn’t Magically Make It Valid
To make their changes appear official, the HOA Board took a significant step. On October 5, 2018, they filed a document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates (Amended CC&Rs)” with the Pinal County Recorder.
For the average homeowner, a formally recorded document filed with the county looks final, official, and legally binding. It’s an intimidating piece of paper that suggests any challenge would be futile.
However, the judge’s ruling highlights a critical legal truth: procedural legitimacy is paramount. An official-looking document, even one filed with the county, is invalid if the legal process required to create it was ignored. The judge found that because the Board did not follow the correct internal procedure—securing the two-thirds vote from homeowners—the very act of recording the document was improper. Even the HOA’s own lawyer seemed to concede this point during the hearing, acknowledging that “perhaps the Amended CC&Rs should not have been recorded.”
The Winner’s Paradox: You Can Be Right and Still Not Get Your Desired Fix
The final order from the Administrative Law Judge was unambiguous: Douglas Karolak, the petitioner, was officially deemed the “prevailing party.” The judge concluded that the HOA had acted in violation of its own community documents and Arizona state law. This was a clear-cut victory for the homeowner.
But here is the shocking twist. Karolak’s requested remedy was for the illegally filed “Amended CC&Rs” to be rescinded—in other words, to have them officially nullified and removed. This seems like the logical and necessary fix to the problem.
The judge, however, was bound by the limits of her authority. The final decision states plainly: “The Administrative Law Judge does not have the authority under the applicable statute to order the Amended CC&Rs rescinded.” This highlights a critical jurisdictional gap. The Administrative Law Judge’s role in this venue is to determine if a violation occurred and assign limited penalties, not to perform the function of a higher court, which might have the power to void a recorded document.
So, what was the actual remedy for this clear violation? The judge ordered the HOA to repay Karolak his $500 filing fee. No other civil penalty was issued. The homeowner won the argument but did not get the one thing he asked for to correct the board’s improper action.
A Victory on Paper, A Question in Practice
The case of Douglas J. Karolak is a powerful real-world lesson. It proves that a single homeowner, armed with a thorough understanding of their community’s governing documents, can successfully challenge an overreaching HOA board and win. It confirms that procedural shortcuts, even when filed and recorded, do not make an illegal action legal.
But it also reveals the frustrating limitations that can exist within the legal process. The homeowner was proven right, but the improperly filed document remains on the books, unable to be rescinded in this specific venue. It raises a crucial question for homeowners everywhere: How do you ensure your victory has real teeth?
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Douglas J. Karolak(petitioner)
Respondent Side
David A. Fitzgibbons III(HOA attorney) Fitzgibbons Law Offices PLC Represented VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
CV Mathai(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
John Kelsey(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Kristi Kelsey(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
William Findley(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Kay Niemi(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Mark Korte(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Felicia Del Sol(property manager rep) Norris Management
Neutral Parties
Tammy L. Eigenheer(ALJ) Office of Administrative Hearings
Judy Lowe(Commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate
A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1); CC&Rs Part 10, Section 10.4
Outcome Summary
Petitioner was deemed the prevailing party after establishing that the Respondent HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1) and the community documents by improperly recording Amended CC&Rs without proper owner consent. The Respondent was ordered to refund the $500.00 filing fee. However, the ALJ could not grant the requested relief (rescission of the Amended CC&Rs) due to a lack of statutory authority.
Key Issues & Findings
Violation regarding the validity of Amended CC&Rs due to lack of required owner approval.
The Petitioner alleged that the Amended CC&Rs recorded by the Board were invalid because they were not approved by two-thirds (2/3) of the lot owners as required by the CC&Rs and statute. The ALJ agreed, finding the Board acted improperly and violated the documents and statute.
Orders: Respondent was ordered to pay Petitioner the filing fee of $500.00. No civil penalty was assessed. The ALJ determined she lacked the statutory authority to order the rescission of the Amended CC&Rs requested by the Petitioner.
Briefing Document: Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Executive Summary
This briefing analyzes the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decision in the case of Douglas J. Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association (No. 20F-H2020041-REL). The central issue was whether the HOA Board had the authority to unilaterally amend and record changes to the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) without the required homeowner vote.
The petitioner, Douglas J. Karolak, successfully argued that the HOA violated its own governing documents and Arizona state law by filing “Amended CC&Rs” on October 5, 2018, without securing the approval of two-thirds of the lot owners. The HOA contended its actions were a valid exercise of its authority to create “Association Rules.”
ALJ Tammy L. Eigenheer ruled decisively in favor of the petitioner. The decision established a clear legal distinction between the Board’s power to adopt rules and the separate, more stringent process required to formally amend the CC&Rs. The judge found the Board acted improperly, declaring Karolak the prevailing party and ordering the HOA to reimburse his $500 filing fee. Notably, while the judge found the amended document was improperly recorded, she concluded she lacked the statutory authority to order its rescission, which was the remedy the petitioner had requested.
Case Overview
Case Name
Douglas J. Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Case Number
20F-H2020041-REL
Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings
Administrative Law Judge
Tammy L. Eigenheer
Hearing Date
May 1, 2020
Decision Date
May 21, 2020
The Central Dispute
The core of the dispute revolved around the legitimacy of a document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates” (Amended CC&Rs), which the HOA Board recorded with the Pinal County Recorder on October 5, 2018.
• Petitioner’s Position (Douglas J. Karolak): The Amended CC&Rs are invalid because they were not approved by “owners of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the Lots,” a requirement explicitly stated in Section 10.4 of the original CC&Rs and supported by Arizona statute A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1). Karolak argued that the Board’s action of recording an amendment is fundamentally different from its power to adopt internal “Association Rules.”
• Respondent’s Position (VVE – Casa Grande HOA): The Board argued that its actions were a valid exercise of the authority granted to it under the CC&Rs. It claimed that because the only changes were to Part 7 (Use Restrictions), they fell under the Board’s power to “adopt, amend, or repeal such rules and regulations as it deems reasonable and appropriate” (Section 3.4) and to “modify or waive the foregoing restrictions… by reasonable rules and regulations” (Section 7.43). The Respondent’s counsel did, however, concede that “perhaps the Amended CC&Rs should not have been recorded.”
Factual Background and Chronology
• The VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association is a 56-lot community in Casa Grande, Arizona, with 19 lots remaining vacant at the time of the hearing.
• April 30, 1999: The original “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for VVE” (CC&Rs) was recorded.
• 2014 and 2015: The HOA Board made unsuccessful attempts to amend the CC&Rs through membership votes.
• 2018: Following the failed votes, the Board determined it would make changes to the “rules section” of the CC&Rs under the authority it believed was granted by Section 3.4.
• October 5, 2018: The Board recorded the Amended CC&Rs with the Pinal County Recorder. The HOA acknowledged that these amendments had not been approved by the required two-thirds of lot owners.
Legal Analysis and Key Provisions
The decision rested on the interpretation of specific sections of the community’s CC&Rs and Arizona state law. The judge concluded that the document’s structure clearly separates the process of rulemaking from the process of formal amendment.
Provision
Source
Summary of Stipulation
Amendment Process
CC&Rs Section 10.4
Requires an instrument “executed by the Owners of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the Lots” and recorded to become effective.
Rulemaking Authority
CC&Rs Section 3.4
Empowers the Board to adopt, amend, or repeal “Association Rules” governing the use of the property. States rules have the “same force and effect as if they were set forth in” the CC&Rs.
Statutory Requirement
A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)
Provides that a declaration may be amended by the association via an affirmative vote or written consent of the number of owners specified in the declaration.
The judge’s rationale emphasized that the distinct sections for rulemaking (3.4) and amendments (10.4) demonstrate that the original drafters did not intend for the Board to have the power to unilaterally amend the CC&Rs. The judge stated, “The fact that the two topics are covered as separate topics in the CC&Rs leads to the conclusion that the original drafters of the CC&Rs did not contemplate that the Board had the authority to, on its own, amend the CC&Rs.”
The Court’s Decision and Final Order
The Administrative Law Judge ruled that the petitioner, Douglas J. Karolak, had successfully proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the respondent HOA had acted improperly.
Key Findings:
• The HOA Board did not have the authority to amend the CC&Rs without the approval of two-thirds of the lot owners.
• The Board’s action of recording the Amended CC&Rs on October 5, 2018, was a violation of the community’s governing documents (Section 10.4) and Arizona state law (A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)).
• The Board’s ability to create “Association Rules” is a separate and distinct process from the formal procedure required to amend the Declaration.
Final Order:
• The petitioner, Douglas J. Karolak, was deemed the prevailing party.
• The respondent HOA was ordered to pay the petitioner his $500.00 filing fee within thirty days of the order.
• No civil penalty was found to be appropriate in the matter.
• Critically, the judge determined that under the applicable statute (A.R.S. § 32-2199.02), the Administrative Law Judge does not have the authority to order the Amended CC&Rs rescinded, despite this being the remedy requested by the petitioner.
The order is binding on both parties unless a request for rehearing is filed with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the decision.
Study Guide – 20F-H2020041-REL
Study Guide: Karolak v. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
This guide is designed to review the key facts, legal arguments, and outcomes of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in the case of Douglas J. Karolak vs. VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association (No. 20F-H2020041-REL).
Short-Answer Quiz
Instructions: Answer the following questions in two to three complete sentences, drawing all information directly from the provided legal decision.
1. Who were the petitioner and the respondent in this case, and what was the petitioner’s core allegation?
2. What specific statute and section of the community documents did the petitioner claim the respondent violated?
3. According to Section 10.4 of the original CC&Rs, what was the required procedure for amending the Declaration?
4. Under what authority did the VVE – Casa Grande HOA Board claim it could make changes to the community documents without a membership vote?
5. What key event occurred on or about October 5, 2018, that became the central point of the dispute?
6. What was the respondent’s primary argument for why their actions were valid?
7. What is the “preponderance of the evidence,” and which party bears the burden of proof to establish a violation?
8. Why did the Administrative Law Judge conclude that the Board’s authority to create “Association Rules” was a separate process from amending the CC&Rs?
9. What remedy did the petitioner request, and why was it not granted by the Administrative Law Judge?
10. What was the final order issued by the Judge in this case?
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Answer Key
1. The petitioner was Douglas J. Karolak, a homeowner. The respondent was the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association. Karolak’s core allegation was that the HOA had improperly amended the community’s governing documents.
2. The petitioner alleged a violation of Arizona Revised Statute (A.R.S.) § 33-1817(A)(1). He also claimed a violation of Part 10, Section 10.4 of the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).
3. Section 10.4 of the CC&Rs stipulated that the Declaration could be amended by an instrument executed by the owners of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the lots. The amendment would not be effective until that instrument was officially recorded.
4. The HOA Board claimed it had the authority to make the changes under Section 3.4 of the CC&Rs. This section empowered the Board to adopt, amend, or repeal “Association Rules” as it deemed reasonable and appropriate.
5. On or about October 5, 2018, the Board recorded a document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates” (Amended CC&Rs) with the Pinal County Recorder. This was done without the required two-thirds vote from the lot owners.
6. The respondent argued that because the only changes made were to Part 7 (Use Restrictions), which fell under the type of rules the Board was authorized to adopt, the Amended CC&Rs were a valid exercise of the Board’s authority. Their counsel did acknowledge, however, that perhaps the document should not have been recorded.
7. A “preponderance of the evidence” is proof that convinces the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not. The petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that the respondent committed the alleged violations by this standard.
8. The Judge concluded they were separate processes because the CC&Rs cover the topics in different sections. This separation led the Judge to believe the original drafters did not intend for the Board to have the authority to amend the CC&Rs on its own.
9. The petitioner requested that the improperly recorded Amended CC&Rs be rescinded. This remedy was not granted because the applicable statute, A.R.S. § 32-2199.02, does not give the Administrative Law Judge the specific authority to order a document rescinded.
10. The final order deemed the petitioner the prevailing party. It further ordered the respondent to repay the petitioner his $500.00 filing fee within thirty days, but found that no civil penalty was appropriate.
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Essay Questions
Instructions: The following questions are designed to promote deeper analysis of the case. Formulate a comprehensive response to each, using only the information presented in the legal decision.
1. Analyze the distinction made by the Administrative Law Judge between the Board’s authority to create “Association Rules” under Section 3.4 and the process for amending the Declaration under Section 10.4. Why was this distinction critical to the case’s outcome?
2. Discuss the legal standard of “preponderance of the evidence” as defined in the decision. How did the petitioner successfully meet this burden of proof to establish the respondent’s violation, and what specific facts supported this conclusion?
3. Examine the respondent’s (HOA’s) argument regarding its authority to amend the CC&Rs. What were the fundamental flaws in this argument, and how did their counsel’s acknowledgment about the recording of the Amended CC&Rs potentially weaken their position?
4. Explain the legal framework governing this dispute, citing the specific Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) mentioned in the decision. Detail the roles of the Arizona Department of Real Estate, the Office of Administrative Hearings, and the Administrative Law Judge in resolving this type of HOA conflict.
5. Evaluate the final Order of the Administrative Law Judge. While the petitioner was deemed the prevailing party, why was their requested remedy (rescission of the Amended CC&Rs) denied? What does this reveal about the specific limits of the Administrative Law Judge’s authority in such cases under A.R.S. § 32-2199.02?
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Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
An official who presides over administrative hearings. In this case, Tammy L. Eigenheer of the Office of Administrative Hearings made the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and issued the final order.
A.R.S. § 33-1817(A)(1)
The specific Arizona Revised Statute cited by the petitioner. It states that a declaration may be amended by the association with an affirmative vote or written consent of the number of owners specified in the declaration.
Amended CC&Rs
The document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates,” which the HOA Board recorded on October 5, 2018, without the required two-thirds owner approval.
Association Rules
Rules and regulations that the HOA Board is empowered to adopt, amend, or repeal under Section 3.4 of the CC&Rs to govern the use of Common Areas and other parts of the Project. The Board argued their changes fell under this authority.
Burden of Proof
The obligation to prove one’s assertion. In this case, the petitioner bore the burden of proof to establish the respondent’s violations by a preponderance of the evidence.
An acronym for Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions. These are the governing legal documents for a planned community. The original “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for VVE” was recorded on April 30, 1999.
Department
Refers to the Arizona Department of Real Estate, the agency with which the petitioner filed his Homeowners Association (HOA) Dispute Process Petition.
An acronym for Homeowners Association. In this case, the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association, an association of 56 lot owners in Casa Grande, Arizona.
Office of Administrative Hearings
The office responsible for conducting hearings for disputes filed with state agencies like the Department of Real Estate.
Petitioner
The party who initiates a legal action or petition. In this case, homeowner Douglas J. Karolak.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The evidentiary standard required to win the case, defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed. In this case, the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association.
Blog Post – 20F-H2020041-REL
Your HOA Just Changed the Rules? Why This Homeowner’s $500 Victory is a Warning to Everyone
For millions of Americans, living in a planned community means living under the authority of a Homeowners Association (HOA). While intended to protect property values, these relationships can often feel one-sided, with boards issuing mandates and homeowners feeling powerless to push back. It’s a common frustration, but it’s rare to see a single homeowner challenge their board and force a legal reckoning.
A recent case from Arizona, Douglas J. Karolak versus the VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association, provides a critical case study in board overreach and the surprising limits of legal victory. Karolak alleged his HOA board violated its own governing documents and state law by improperly changing the community’s core rules.
He took his case to an administrative law judge and, in a significant ruling, he won. But the outcome of this seemingly straightforward dispute was far from simple. The final decision reveals a shocking twist that holds critical lessons for every homeowner about the difference between being right on paper and getting the remedy you actually want.
There’s a Huge Difference Between a ‘Rule Change’ and a ‘Declaration Amendment’
The first lesson from this case is a critical one for every homeowner: understand the constitutional hierarchy of your community’s documents. The core of the dispute was the HOA Board’s attempt to amend its foundational document, the CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions), without getting the required approval from the homeowners.
Here are the key facts of the case:
• The Original Rule: The community’s CC&Rs explicitly stated in Section 10.4 that any amendment required a vote and execution by “at least two-thirds (2/3) of the Lots.” This is the highest level of authority in a planned community, akin to a constitution.
• The Failed Attempts: The Board had tried to get this two-thirds vote in both 2014 and 2015, but was unsuccessful.
• The Workaround: In 2018, the Board decided to bypass the homeowners. It used a separate power granted in Section 3.4 of the CC&Rs—the authority to create day-to-day “Association Rules”—to make what it called changes to the “‘rules section’ of the CC&Rs, specifically targeting the Use Restrictions in Part 7.”
The judge’s conclusion was crystal clear: The CC&Rs were drafted to treat the power to create “rules” and the power to “amend” the declaration as two entirely separate processes. This separation acts as a crucial check on the board’s power, preventing a small group from unilaterally changing the fundamental property rights of all owners. As the judge noted, “the original drafters of the CC&Rs did not contemplate that the Board had the authority to, on its own, amend the CC&Rs.”
Recording a Document Doesn’t Magically Make It Valid
To make their changes appear official, the HOA Board took a significant step. On October 5, 2018, they filed a document titled “Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Val Vista Estates (Amended CC&Rs)” with the Pinal County Recorder.
For the average homeowner, a formally recorded document filed with the county looks final, official, and legally binding. It’s an intimidating piece of paper that suggests any challenge would be futile.
However, the judge’s ruling highlights a critical legal truth: procedural legitimacy is paramount. An official-looking document, even one filed with the county, is invalid if the legal process required to create it was ignored. The judge found that because the Board did not follow the correct internal procedure—securing the two-thirds vote from homeowners—the very act of recording the document was improper. Even the HOA’s own lawyer seemed to concede this point during the hearing, acknowledging that “perhaps the Amended CC&Rs should not have been recorded.”
The Winner’s Paradox: You Can Be Right and Still Not Get Your Desired Fix
The final order from the Administrative Law Judge was unambiguous: Douglas Karolak, the petitioner, was officially deemed the “prevailing party.” The judge concluded that the HOA had acted in violation of its own community documents and Arizona state law. This was a clear-cut victory for the homeowner.
But here is the shocking twist. Karolak’s requested remedy was for the illegally filed “Amended CC&Rs” to be rescinded—in other words, to have them officially nullified and removed. This seems like the logical and necessary fix to the problem.
The judge, however, was bound by the limits of her authority. The final decision states plainly: “The Administrative Law Judge does not have the authority under the applicable statute to order the Amended CC&Rs rescinded.” This highlights a critical jurisdictional gap. The Administrative Law Judge’s role in this venue is to determine if a violation occurred and assign limited penalties, not to perform the function of a higher court, which might have the power to void a recorded document.
So, what was the actual remedy for this clear violation? The judge ordered the HOA to repay Karolak his $500 filing fee. No other civil penalty was issued. The homeowner won the argument but did not get the one thing he asked for to correct the board’s improper action.
A Victory on Paper, A Question in Practice
The case of Douglas J. Karolak is a powerful real-world lesson. It proves that a single homeowner, armed with a thorough understanding of their community’s governing documents, can successfully challenge an overreaching HOA board and win. It confirms that procedural shortcuts, even when filed and recorded, do not make an illegal action legal.
But it also reveals the frustrating limitations that can exist within the legal process. The homeowner was proven right, but the improperly filed document remains on the books, unable to be rescinded in this specific venue. It raises a crucial question for homeowners everywhere: How do you ensure your victory has real teeth?
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Douglas J. Karolak(petitioner)
Respondent Side
David A. Fitzgibbons III(HOA attorney) Fitzgibbons Law Offices PLC Represented VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
CV Mathai(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
John Kelsey(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Kristi Kelsey(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
William Findley(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Kay Niemi(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Mark Korte(witness) VVE – Casa Grande Homeowners Association
Felicia Del Sol(property manager rep) Norris Management
Neutral Parties
Tammy L. Eigenheer(ALJ) Office of Administrative Hearings
Judy Lowe(Commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate
The Petition was upheld on all issues asserted by the Petitioner. The Respondent was found in violation of A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) (failure to provide election documents), A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) (failure to hold an annual meeting in 2019), and Article 3, Section 2 of the Bylaws (improperly prohibiting write-in ballots). Respondent was ordered to supply Petitioner with relevant documents and refund the Petitioner's filing fee of $1,500.00. No Civil Penalty was found appropriate.
Respondent failed to provide Petitioner with the required election materials and documentation from the October 2018 elections, violating statutory requirements for retention and availability of these materials for owner inspection.
Orders: Respondent ordered to supply Petitioner with the relevant documents, pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1250(C), within ten (10) days of the Order.
Filing fee: $1,500.00, Fee refunded: Yes
Disposition: petitioner_win
Cited:
A.R.S. § 33-1250(C)
Open meetings; exceptions
Respondent postponed its required yearly 2019 meeting until January 2020, resulting in a failure to hold a unit owners' association meeting in 2019 as required by statute.
Orders: Petition upheld on this issue.
Filing fee: $1,500.00, Fee refunded: Yes
Disposition: petitioner_win
Cited:
A.R.S. § 33-1248(B)
Selection
Respondent's board of directors declared write-in ballots invalid for the November 20, 2019, election. Since the Bylaws were silent on prohibiting write-in ballots, Respondent failed to show how the ballots were invalid.
Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)
MORRIS K. UDALL, ARIZONA LAW OF EVIDENCE § 5 (1960)
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1220 (8th ed. 1999)
Video Overview
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
20F-H2019033-REL Decision – 778923.pdf
Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:31:15 (108.5 KB)
Briefing Doc – 20F-H2019033-REL
Briefing Document: Bischoff v. Country Hills West Condominium Association
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the findings and decision in the case of Donna M. Bischoff v. Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc. (No. 20F-H2019033-REL), heard by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. The Administrative Law Judge found entirely in favor of the Petitioner, Donna M. Bischoff, concluding that the Respondent, Country Hills West Condominium Association (“the Association”), committed multiple violations of Arizona state statutes and its own governing documents.
The core violations upheld by the court are:
1. Failure to Hold a Required Annual Meeting: The Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) by failing to hold its required annual meeting within the 2019 calendar year, repeatedly postponing it until January 2020.
2. Failure to Provide Election Records: The Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) by failing to provide the Petitioner with complete election materials for inspection, including ballots, envelopes, and sign-in sheets from the October 2018 election.
3. Improper Prohibition of Write-In Ballots: The Association violated Article 3, Section 2 of its Bylaws by unilaterally prohibiting write-in ballots for the 2019 election, despite its governing documents being silent on the issue.
As a result, the Association was ordered to provide the requested documents to the Petitioner within ten days and to reimburse her $1,500 filing fee within thirty days. The decision underscores the legal obligation of homeowners’ associations to adhere strictly to statutory requirements for meetings, elections, and record transparency.
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I. Case Overview
The dispute was adjudicated by the Office of Administrative Hearings following a petition filed by homeowner Donna M. Bischoff with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on December 11, 2019.
Case Detail
Information
Case Name
Donna M Bischoff, Petitioner, v. Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc., Respondent
Case Number
20F-H2019033-REL
Adjudicator
Administrative Law Judge Antara Nath Rivera
Hearing Date
March 10, 2020
Decision Date
March 30, 2020
Petitioner Representative
Donna M. Bischoff (on her own behalf)
Respondent Representative
Doug Meyer, President and Director
II. Petitioner’s Allegations
The Petitioner, Donna M. Bischoff, asserted that the Country Hills West Condominium Association committed violations of state law and its own governing documents. The specific allegations were:
• Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248(B): Failure to hold the mandatory annual unit owners’ association meeting within the 2019 calendar year.
• Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1250(C): Failure to make election materials, including ballots and related items, available for inspection by a unit owner.
• Violation of Bylaws Article 3, Section 2: Improperly invalidating election ballots by prohibiting write-in candidates without any authority from the governing documents.
The Petitioner bore the burden of proof to establish these violations by a “preponderance of the evidence,” defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
III. Core Issues and Factual Findings
The hearing established several key facts that formed the basis of the Judge’s decision. The testimony from both Ms. Bischoff and the Association’s President, Doug Meyer, was central to these findings.
A. Failure to Hold the 2019 Annual Meeting
• Timeline of Events: The Association’s required annual meeting for 2019 was initially scheduled for November 20, 2019. It was subsequently postponed three times: first to December 19, 2019; then to December 30, 2019; and ultimately held on January 24, 2020.
• Respondent’s Justification: Mr. Meyer testified that the postponements were necessary because write-in candidates appeared on the ballot, which the board had prohibited. He stated that the board “needed time to reprint the ballot and mail them out.”
• Conclusion of Law: The evidence was undisputed that no annual meeting took place during the 2019 calendar year. The Judge concluded that by postponing the meeting into the following year, the Association was in direct violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248(B), which mandates that “A meeting of the unit owners’ association shall be held at least once each year.”
B. Denial of Access to Election Records
• Petitioner’s Request: In October 2018, Ms. Bischoff requested to see the election results from the October 2018 meeting, specifically seeking to know which units had voted.
• Respondent’s Response: The Association initially did not provide the results. A few weeks prior to the March 2020 hearing, it supplied Ms. Bischoff with vote tallies and a list of unit members who voted. However, it failed to provide the full scope of required materials.
• Missing Documentation: The Association did not provide the “ballots, envelopes, related materials, and sign-in sheets” as mandated by statute for inspection.
• Respondent’s Justification: Mr. Meyer argued that no election actually occurred at the October 18, 2018, meeting because there was no quorum. He further made the admission that the Association had not achieved a quorum for any meeting in the preceding 20 years. He claimed that without an election, there was no obligation to publish ballots.
• Conclusion of Law: The Judge found that the Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1250(C). The statute requires that “Ballots, envelopes and related materials… shall be retained… and made available for unit owner inspection for at least one year.” The partial and delayed provision of records was insufficient to meet this legal requirement.
C. Improper Prohibition of Write-In Ballots
• The Dispute: The November 20, 2019, meeting was cancelled because some ballots contained write-in candidates. The board of directors informed members that write-in ballots were prohibited and would be “thrown out.”
• Petitioner’s Argument: Ms. Bischoff argued that the board could not “choose how to interpret a silent document.” She pointed out that the Bylaws and Articles of Incorporation do not prohibit write-in ballots and that the same board had allowed them in a 2017 election.
• Respondent’s Position: Mr. Meyer acknowledged that the Bylaws were silent on the issue but stated the Association needed to “figure out how to handle” them. A membership meeting to discuss the issue was held on December 30, 2019, but failed to achieve a quorum.
• Conclusion of Law: The Judge determined that the Association violated its own Bylaws. The decision states, “absent any clear language in the A.R.S. or the Bylaws prohibiting write in ballots, Respondent failed to show how the ballots were invalid.” The board’s unilateral prohibition was therefore found to be improper.
IV. Legal Conclusions and Final Order
The Administrative Law Judge upheld the petition on all issues, finding that the Petitioner had successfully proven her case by a preponderance of the evidence.
Final Order:
Based on the foregoing conclusions, IT IS ORDERED that:
1. The Petition filed by Donna M. Bischoff is upheld on all issues.
2. The Petitioner is deemed the prevailing party in the matter.
3. The Respondent must supply the Petitioner with the relevant election documents pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) within ten (10) days of the Order.
4. The Respondent must pay the Petitioner’s filing fee of $1,500.00 directly to the Petitioner within thirty (30) days of the Order.
5. No Civil Penalty is found to be appropriate in this matter.
The Order is binding on the parties unless a request for rehearing is filed with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the service of the Order.
Study Guide – 20F-H2019033-REL
Study Guide: Bischoff v. Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc.
This study guide provides a review of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in case number 20F-H2019033-REL, concerning a dispute between a homeowner and a condominium association. It includes a quiz with an answer key, essay questions for deeper analysis, and a glossary of key terms found in the source document.
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Short-Answer Quiz
Instructions: Answer the following questions in 2-3 sentences each, based on the provided source document.
1. Who were the primary parties in the legal dispute, and what were their roles?
2. What specific violations did the Petitioner, Donna M. Bischoff, allege against the Respondent?
3. Why was the 2019 yearly meeting for the Country Hills West Condominium Association repeatedly rescheduled?
4. What was the Respondent’s position on the validity of write-in ballots for the November 20, 2019, election?
5. What information did the Petitioner request from the October 2018 election, and what was the initial response?
6. What is the definition of “quorum” according to the association’s Bylaws, and why was it significant in this case?
7. What is the legal standard of proof the Petitioner was required to meet in this hearing?
8. According to the decision, how did the Respondent violate A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) regarding association meetings?
9. According to the decision, how did the Respondent violate A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) regarding election materials?
10. What were the key components of the final Order issued by the Administrative Law Judge?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties were Donna M. Bischoff, the Petitioner, and the Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc., the Respondent. The Petitioner is the homeowner who filed the complaint, and the Respondent is the homeowners association accused of violations.
2. The Petitioner alleged violations of Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1250(C) and § 33-1248(B), as well as Article 3, Section 2 of the association’s Bylaws. These allegations related to the handling of yearly meetings and elections.
3. The 2019 yearly meeting was initially scheduled for November 20, 2019, but was rescheduled three times, ultimately taking place in January 2020. The first cancellation was because some ballots contained write-in candidates, which the board deemed prohibited.
4. The Respondent’s representative, Doug Meyer, testified that members were informed that write-in ballots were not valid for the November 20, 2019, election. He stated that any ballots with write-in candidates would have been thrown out.
5. The Petitioner requested to see the election results from the October 2018 election, specifically wanting to know which units voted. While she was eventually given the voting tallies, the Respondent did not initially provide the requested results.
6. Quorum is defined in Article 4, Section 3 of the Bylaws. It was significant because the Respondent’s president, Mr. Meyer, acknowledged that the association had not achieved a quorum for its meetings in the last 20 years, and thus no election occurred at the October 18, 2018, meeting.
7. The Petitioner had the burden of proof to establish the alleged violations by a “preponderance of the evidence.” This standard is defined as proof that convinces the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not.
8. The Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) by failing to hold a required yearly meeting within the calendar year of 2019. The evidence showed that the meeting scheduled for 2019 was postponed until January 2020.
9. The Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) by failing to provide the Petitioner with all required election materials from the 2018 election. While vote tallies were eventually provided, the statute requires that ballots, envelopes, and related materials be retained and made available for inspection for at least one year.
10. The Administrative Law Judge’s Order upheld the Petition on all issues, deemed the Petitioner the prevailing party, and required the Respondent to supply the relevant documents within 10 days. The Order also mandated that the Respondent reimburse the Petitioner’s filing fee of $1,500.00 within 30 days.
——————————————————————————–
Essay Questions
Instructions: The following questions are designed for longer, more analytical responses. Use the information presented in the source document to construct a comprehensive argument for each prompt.
1. Analyze the Respondent’s handling of the write-in ballot issue for the 2019 election. Discuss the legal basis (or lack thereof) for their actions as presented in the hearing, and explain why the Administrative Law Judge ultimately ruled that their prohibition of these ballots was a violation of the Bylaws.
2. Explain the concept of “quorum” as it relates to this case. How did the association’s failure to achieve a quorum for 20 years impact its governance, specifically regarding the 2018 meeting and the Respondent’s obligation to produce election records?
3. Describe in detail the specific violations of the Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) that the Country Hills West Condominium Association was found to have committed. For each statute (A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) and A.R.S. § 33-1250(C)), detail the legal requirement and explain how the Respondent’s actions failed to meet that standard.
4. Discuss the legal standard of “preponderance of the evidence.” Using testimony and evidence presented by both the Petitioner and the Respondent, explain how the Petitioner successfully met this burden of proof for her allegations.
5. Outline the final Order issued by the Administrative Law Judge. Beyond the simple outcome, explain the significance of each component of the order, including the validation of the petition, the designation of a “prevailing party,” the directive to supply documents, and the financial remedy awarded.
——————————————————————————–
Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge
An official who presides over administrative hearings, makes findings of fact and conclusions of law, and issues decisions and orders. In this case, Antara Nath Rivera.
Arizona Department of Real Estate (Department)
The state agency with which a homeowner or planned community organization can file a petition for a hearing concerning violations of community documents or statutes.
Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.)
The collection of laws enacted by the Arizona state legislature. The specific statutes cited were A.R.S. §§ 33-1250(C) and 33-1248(B).
Bylaws
The rules and regulations that govern the internal operations of an organization, such as a homeowners association. In this case, the Bylaws of Country Hills West Association, Inc. were a key document.
Homeowners Association (HOA)
An organization in a subdivision, planned community, or condominium that makes and enforces rules for the properties and its residents.
Office of Administrative Hearings
The state agency where petitions filed with the Department of Real Estate are heard before an Administrative Law Judge.
Petitioner
The party who files a petition or brings a legal action against another party. In this case, Donna M. Bischoff.
Preponderance of the evidence
The standard of proof in this civil administrative case. It is met when the evidence presented is sufficient to “incline a fair and impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the other.”
Quorum
The minimum number of members of an assembly or society that must be present at any of its meetings to make the proceedings of that meeting valid. The Respondent had not achieved quorum for 20 years.
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed or a legal action is brought. In this case, Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc.
Blog Post – 20F-H2019033-REL
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20F-H2019033-REL
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This source is an Administrative Law Judge Decision from the Office of Administrative Hearings regarding a dispute between Donna M. Bischoff, the Petitioner, and Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc., the Respondent. The document details the hearing held on March 10, 2020, where the Petitioner alleged the Condominium Association violated Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) and the association’s Bylaws. Specifically, the Petitioner claimed violations related to the failure to hold a required yearly meeting in 2019, the failure to provide election materials for inspection, and the improper prohibition of write-in ballots where the Bylaws were silent. The Administrative Law Judge ultimately upheld the Petition on all issues, finding the Respondent in violation, and ordered the Association to provide the requested documents and pay the Petitioner’s $1,500.00 filing fee.
What were the specific legal violations found against the Condominium Association regarding meetings and documents?
How did the lack of clarity in the Bylaws regarding write-in ballots impact the association’s actions?
What was the ultimate outcome of this administrative hearing, including the ordered remedies for the petitioner?
Based on 1 source
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Donna M Bischoff(petitioner) Appeared on her own behalf
Respondent Side
Doug Meyer(president, director, witness) Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc. Appeared and testified on behalf of Respondent
Neutral Parties
Antara Nath Rivera(ALJ) OAH
Judy Lowe(commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate Decision transmitted electronically to Commissioner
The Petition was upheld on all issues asserted by the Petitioner. The Respondent was found in violation of A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) (failure to provide election documents), A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) (failure to hold an annual meeting in 2019), and Article 3, Section 2 of the Bylaws (improperly prohibiting write-in ballots). Respondent was ordered to supply Petitioner with relevant documents and refund the Petitioner's filing fee of $1,500.00. No Civil Penalty was found appropriate.
Respondent failed to provide Petitioner with the required election materials and documentation from the October 2018 elections, violating statutory requirements for retention and availability of these materials for owner inspection.
Orders: Respondent ordered to supply Petitioner with the relevant documents, pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1250(C), within ten (10) days of the Order.
Filing fee: $1,500.00, Fee refunded: Yes
Disposition: petitioner_win
Cited:
A.R.S. § 33-1250(C)
Open meetings; exceptions
Respondent postponed its required yearly 2019 meeting until January 2020, resulting in a failure to hold a unit owners' association meeting in 2019 as required by statute.
Orders: Petition upheld on this issue.
Filing fee: $1,500.00, Fee refunded: Yes
Disposition: petitioner_win
Cited:
A.R.S. § 33-1248(B)
Selection
Respondent's board of directors declared write-in ballots invalid for the November 20, 2019, election. Since the Bylaws were silent on prohibiting write-in ballots, Respondent failed to show how the ballots were invalid.
Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)
MORRIS K. UDALL, ARIZONA LAW OF EVIDENCE § 5 (1960)
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1220 (8th ed. 1999)
Video Overview
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
20F-H2019033-REL Decision – 778923.pdf
Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:34:47 (108.5 KB)
Briefing Doc – 20F-H2019033-REL
Briefing Document: Bischoff v. Country Hills West Condominium Association
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the findings and decision in the case of Donna M. Bischoff v. Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc. (No. 20F-H2019033-REL), heard by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings. The Administrative Law Judge found entirely in favor of the Petitioner, Donna M. Bischoff, concluding that the Respondent, Country Hills West Condominium Association (“the Association”), committed multiple violations of Arizona state statutes and its own governing documents.
The core violations upheld by the court are:
1. Failure to Hold a Required Annual Meeting: The Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) by failing to hold its required annual meeting within the 2019 calendar year, repeatedly postponing it until January 2020.
2. Failure to Provide Election Records: The Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) by failing to provide the Petitioner with complete election materials for inspection, including ballots, envelopes, and sign-in sheets from the October 2018 election.
3. Improper Prohibition of Write-In Ballots: The Association violated Article 3, Section 2 of its Bylaws by unilaterally prohibiting write-in ballots for the 2019 election, despite its governing documents being silent on the issue.
As a result, the Association was ordered to provide the requested documents to the Petitioner within ten days and to reimburse her $1,500 filing fee within thirty days. The decision underscores the legal obligation of homeowners’ associations to adhere strictly to statutory requirements for meetings, elections, and record transparency.
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I. Case Overview
The dispute was adjudicated by the Office of Administrative Hearings following a petition filed by homeowner Donna M. Bischoff with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on December 11, 2019.
Case Detail
Information
Case Name
Donna M Bischoff, Petitioner, v. Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc., Respondent
Case Number
20F-H2019033-REL
Adjudicator
Administrative Law Judge Antara Nath Rivera
Hearing Date
March 10, 2020
Decision Date
March 30, 2020
Petitioner Representative
Donna M. Bischoff (on her own behalf)
Respondent Representative
Doug Meyer, President and Director
II. Petitioner’s Allegations
The Petitioner, Donna M. Bischoff, asserted that the Country Hills West Condominium Association committed violations of state law and its own governing documents. The specific allegations were:
• Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248(B): Failure to hold the mandatory annual unit owners’ association meeting within the 2019 calendar year.
• Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1250(C): Failure to make election materials, including ballots and related items, available for inspection by a unit owner.
• Violation of Bylaws Article 3, Section 2: Improperly invalidating election ballots by prohibiting write-in candidates without any authority from the governing documents.
The Petitioner bore the burden of proof to establish these violations by a “preponderance of the evidence,” defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
III. Core Issues and Factual Findings
The hearing established several key facts that formed the basis of the Judge’s decision. The testimony from both Ms. Bischoff and the Association’s President, Doug Meyer, was central to these findings.
A. Failure to Hold the 2019 Annual Meeting
• Timeline of Events: The Association’s required annual meeting for 2019 was initially scheduled for November 20, 2019. It was subsequently postponed three times: first to December 19, 2019; then to December 30, 2019; and ultimately held on January 24, 2020.
• Respondent’s Justification: Mr. Meyer testified that the postponements were necessary because write-in candidates appeared on the ballot, which the board had prohibited. He stated that the board “needed time to reprint the ballot and mail them out.”
• Conclusion of Law: The evidence was undisputed that no annual meeting took place during the 2019 calendar year. The Judge concluded that by postponing the meeting into the following year, the Association was in direct violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248(B), which mandates that “A meeting of the unit owners’ association shall be held at least once each year.”
B. Denial of Access to Election Records
• Petitioner’s Request: In October 2018, Ms. Bischoff requested to see the election results from the October 2018 meeting, specifically seeking to know which units had voted.
• Respondent’s Response: The Association initially did not provide the results. A few weeks prior to the March 2020 hearing, it supplied Ms. Bischoff with vote tallies and a list of unit members who voted. However, it failed to provide the full scope of required materials.
• Missing Documentation: The Association did not provide the “ballots, envelopes, related materials, and sign-in sheets” as mandated by statute for inspection.
• Respondent’s Justification: Mr. Meyer argued that no election actually occurred at the October 18, 2018, meeting because there was no quorum. He further made the admission that the Association had not achieved a quorum for any meeting in the preceding 20 years. He claimed that without an election, there was no obligation to publish ballots.
• Conclusion of Law: The Judge found that the Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1250(C). The statute requires that “Ballots, envelopes and related materials… shall be retained… and made available for unit owner inspection for at least one year.” The partial and delayed provision of records was insufficient to meet this legal requirement.
C. Improper Prohibition of Write-In Ballots
• The Dispute: The November 20, 2019, meeting was cancelled because some ballots contained write-in candidates. The board of directors informed members that write-in ballots were prohibited and would be “thrown out.”
• Petitioner’s Argument: Ms. Bischoff argued that the board could not “choose how to interpret a silent document.” She pointed out that the Bylaws and Articles of Incorporation do not prohibit write-in ballots and that the same board had allowed them in a 2017 election.
• Respondent’s Position: Mr. Meyer acknowledged that the Bylaws were silent on the issue but stated the Association needed to “figure out how to handle” them. A membership meeting to discuss the issue was held on December 30, 2019, but failed to achieve a quorum.
• Conclusion of Law: The Judge determined that the Association violated its own Bylaws. The decision states, “absent any clear language in the A.R.S. or the Bylaws prohibiting write in ballots, Respondent failed to show how the ballots were invalid.” The board’s unilateral prohibition was therefore found to be improper.
IV. Legal Conclusions and Final Order
The Administrative Law Judge upheld the petition on all issues, finding that the Petitioner had successfully proven her case by a preponderance of the evidence.
Final Order:
Based on the foregoing conclusions, IT IS ORDERED that:
1. The Petition filed by Donna M. Bischoff is upheld on all issues.
2. The Petitioner is deemed the prevailing party in the matter.
3. The Respondent must supply the Petitioner with the relevant election documents pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) within ten (10) days of the Order.
4. The Respondent must pay the Petitioner’s filing fee of $1,500.00 directly to the Petitioner within thirty (30) days of the Order.
5. No Civil Penalty is found to be appropriate in this matter.
The Order is binding on the parties unless a request for rehearing is filed with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the service of the Order.
Study Guide – 20F-H2019033-REL
Study Guide: Bischoff v. Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc.
This study guide provides a review of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in case number 20F-H2019033-REL, concerning a dispute between a homeowner and a condominium association. It includes a quiz with an answer key, essay questions for deeper analysis, and a glossary of key terms found in the source document.
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Short-Answer Quiz
Instructions: Answer the following questions in 2-3 sentences each, based on the provided source document.
1. Who were the primary parties in the legal dispute, and what were their roles?
2. What specific violations did the Petitioner, Donna M. Bischoff, allege against the Respondent?
3. Why was the 2019 yearly meeting for the Country Hills West Condominium Association repeatedly rescheduled?
4. What was the Respondent’s position on the validity of write-in ballots for the November 20, 2019, election?
5. What information did the Petitioner request from the October 2018 election, and what was the initial response?
6. What is the definition of “quorum” according to the association’s Bylaws, and why was it significant in this case?
7. What is the legal standard of proof the Petitioner was required to meet in this hearing?
8. According to the decision, how did the Respondent violate A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) regarding association meetings?
9. According to the decision, how did the Respondent violate A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) regarding election materials?
10. What were the key components of the final Order issued by the Administrative Law Judge?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties were Donna M. Bischoff, the Petitioner, and the Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc., the Respondent. The Petitioner is the homeowner who filed the complaint, and the Respondent is the homeowners association accused of violations.
2. The Petitioner alleged violations of Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1250(C) and § 33-1248(B), as well as Article 3, Section 2 of the association’s Bylaws. These allegations related to the handling of yearly meetings and elections.
3. The 2019 yearly meeting was initially scheduled for November 20, 2019, but was rescheduled three times, ultimately taking place in January 2020. The first cancellation was because some ballots contained write-in candidates, which the board deemed prohibited.
4. The Respondent’s representative, Doug Meyer, testified that members were informed that write-in ballots were not valid for the November 20, 2019, election. He stated that any ballots with write-in candidates would have been thrown out.
5. The Petitioner requested to see the election results from the October 2018 election, specifically wanting to know which units voted. While she was eventually given the voting tallies, the Respondent did not initially provide the requested results.
6. Quorum is defined in Article 4, Section 3 of the Bylaws. It was significant because the Respondent’s president, Mr. Meyer, acknowledged that the association had not achieved a quorum for its meetings in the last 20 years, and thus no election occurred at the October 18, 2018, meeting.
7. The Petitioner had the burden of proof to establish the alleged violations by a “preponderance of the evidence.” This standard is defined as proof that convinces the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not.
8. The Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) by failing to hold a required yearly meeting within the calendar year of 2019. The evidence showed that the meeting scheduled for 2019 was postponed until January 2020.
9. The Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1250(C) by failing to provide the Petitioner with all required election materials from the 2018 election. While vote tallies were eventually provided, the statute requires that ballots, envelopes, and related materials be retained and made available for inspection for at least one year.
10. The Administrative Law Judge’s Order upheld the Petition on all issues, deemed the Petitioner the prevailing party, and required the Respondent to supply the relevant documents within 10 days. The Order also mandated that the Respondent reimburse the Petitioner’s filing fee of $1,500.00 within 30 days.
——————————————————————————–
Essay Questions
Instructions: The following questions are designed for longer, more analytical responses. Use the information presented in the source document to construct a comprehensive argument for each prompt.
1. Analyze the Respondent’s handling of the write-in ballot issue for the 2019 election. Discuss the legal basis (or lack thereof) for their actions as presented in the hearing, and explain why the Administrative Law Judge ultimately ruled that their prohibition of these ballots was a violation of the Bylaws.
2. Explain the concept of “quorum” as it relates to this case. How did the association’s failure to achieve a quorum for 20 years impact its governance, specifically regarding the 2018 meeting and the Respondent’s obligation to produce election records?
3. Describe in detail the specific violations of the Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) that the Country Hills West Condominium Association was found to have committed. For each statute (A.R.S. § 33-1248(B) and A.R.S. § 33-1250(C)), detail the legal requirement and explain how the Respondent’s actions failed to meet that standard.
4. Discuss the legal standard of “preponderance of the evidence.” Using testimony and evidence presented by both the Petitioner and the Respondent, explain how the Petitioner successfully met this burden of proof for her allegations.
5. Outline the final Order issued by the Administrative Law Judge. Beyond the simple outcome, explain the significance of each component of the order, including the validation of the petition, the designation of a “prevailing party,” the directive to supply documents, and the financial remedy awarded.
——————————————————————————–
Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge
An official who presides over administrative hearings, makes findings of fact and conclusions of law, and issues decisions and orders. In this case, Antara Nath Rivera.
Arizona Department of Real Estate (Department)
The state agency with which a homeowner or planned community organization can file a petition for a hearing concerning violations of community documents or statutes.
Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.)
The collection of laws enacted by the Arizona state legislature. The specific statutes cited were A.R.S. §§ 33-1250(C) and 33-1248(B).
Bylaws
The rules and regulations that govern the internal operations of an organization, such as a homeowners association. In this case, the Bylaws of Country Hills West Association, Inc. were a key document.
Homeowners Association (HOA)
An organization in a subdivision, planned community, or condominium that makes and enforces rules for the properties and its residents.
Office of Administrative Hearings
The state agency where petitions filed with the Department of Real Estate are heard before an Administrative Law Judge.
Petitioner
The party who files a petition or brings a legal action against another party. In this case, Donna M. Bischoff.
Preponderance of the evidence
The standard of proof in this civil administrative case. It is met when the evidence presented is sufficient to “incline a fair and impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the other.”
Quorum
The minimum number of members of an assembly or society that must be present at any of its meetings to make the proceedings of that meeting valid. The Respondent had not achieved quorum for 20 years.
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed or a legal action is brought. In this case, Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc.
Blog Post – 20F-H2019033-REL
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This source is an Administrative Law Judge Decision from the Office of Administrative Hearings regarding a dispute between Donna M. Bischoff, the Petitioner, and Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc., the Respondent. The document details the hearing held on March 10, 2020, where the Petitioner alleged the Condominium Association violated Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) and the association’s Bylaws. Specifically, the Petitioner claimed violations related to the failure to hold a required yearly meeting in 2019, the failure to provide election materials for inspection, and the improper prohibition of write-in ballots where the Bylaws were silent. The Administrative Law Judge ultimately upheld the Petition on all issues, finding the Respondent in violation, and ordered the Association to provide the requested documents and pay the Petitioner’s $1,500.00 filing fee.
What were the specific legal violations found against the Condominium Association regarding meetings and documents?
How did the lack of clarity in the Bylaws regarding write-in ballots impact the association’s actions?
What was the ultimate outcome of this administrative hearing, including the ordered remedies for the petitioner?
Based on 1 source
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Donna M Bischoff(petitioner) Appeared on her own behalf
Respondent Side
Doug Meyer(president, director, witness) Country Hills West Condominium Association, Inc. Appeared and testified on behalf of Respondent
Neutral Parties
Antara Nath Rivera(ALJ) OAH
Judy Lowe(commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate Decision transmitted electronically to Commissioner
The Petitioner's petition alleging violations of the HOA's CC&Rs and A.R.S. § 33-1803 was denied because the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof. The HOA had acknowledged its error regarding the palm trees, issued an apology, and expunged the record, thereby resolving the substantive dispute and making the remaining allegations moot.
Why this result: Petitioner failed to establish that Respondent violated governing documents or statute when the Respondent had already resolved the underlying issue by apology and expungement, and no financial penalties were assessed.
Key Issues & Findings
Violation of Governing Documents and Planned Community Statute
Petitioner filed a two-issue petition alleging Respondent violated CC&Rs and A.R.S. § 33-1803 by fraudulently sending a courtesy notice regarding unapproved palm trees and subsequently deceiving Petitioner, despite the underlying tree issue being resolved and expunged.
Orders: Petitioner's petition is denied.
Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No
Disposition: petitioner_loss
Cited:
A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
Title 33, Chapter 16.1
A.R.S. § 33-1803
A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(1)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(2)
Analytics Highlights
Topics: HOA dispute, Planned Community Statute, CC&Rs violation, Expungement of record, Mootness
Additional Citations:
A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
Title 33, Chapter 16.1
A.R.S. § 33-1803
A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(1)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(2)
Video Overview
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
19F-H1919069-REL Decision – 740332.pdf
Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:29:41 (85.6 KB)
Briefing Doc – 19F-H1919069-REL
Briefing Document: Gregory v. Four Seasons at the Manor HOA (Case No. 19F-H1919069-REL)
Executive Summary
This document provides an analysis of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in Case No. 19F-H1919069-REL, concerning a petition filed by homeowner Dennis Gregory against the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association (HOA). The petition was ultimately denied.
The dispute originated from an incorrect violation notice sent by the HOA on July 13, 2018, regarding palm trees on the Petitioner’s property. The HOA subsequently discovered its error, recognizing the trees were on its “Recommended Plant List.” Consequently, the HOA issued a formal apology to the Petitioner on August 16, 2018, and expunged the violation notice from all records. No fines or penalties were ever imposed.
Despite the resolution, the Petitioner filed a formal dispute petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on May 24, 2019. He alleged the initial notice was fraudulent and that an employee of the HOA’s management company had lied and threatened him. The Administrative Law Judge, Antara Nath Rivera, concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof. The Judge determined that the HOA’s prompt corrective actions—issuing an apology, retracting the notice, and imposing no fines—rendered the issue moot.
Case Overview
The hearing addressed a petition filed by Dennis Gregory alleging that the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association violated its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) and Arizona state law.
Case Detail
Information
Case Number
19F-H1919069-REL
Petitioner
Dennis J Gregory
Respondent
Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association
Presiding Judge
Antara Nath Rivera, Administrative Law Judge
Hearing Date
September 4, 2019
Decision Date
September 24, 2019
Chronology of Events
• July 13, 2018: The HOA sends a courtesy notice to Dennis Gregory requesting the removal of palm trees, citing a violation of the CC&Rs.
• Post-July 13, 2018: Gregory disputes the violation. Upon review, the HOA discovers the palm trees are on its “Recommended Plant List” and therefore permissible.
• August 16, 2018: The HOA sends Gregory a letter of apology via both email and postal mail, deeming the violation notice invalid.
• May 24, 2019: Gregory files a two-issue Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate.
• June 28, 2019: The HOA files its formal answer to the petition.
• September 4, 2019: An administrative hearing is conducted, with testimony from Gregory and Marc Vasquez, Vice President of the HOA’s management company.
• September 24, 2019: The Administrative Law Judge issues a decision denying the petition.
Petitioner’s Allegations and Testimony
Dennis Gregory filed the petition after the palm tree issue was resolved because he was upset with the HOA’s handling of the matter. His testimony and allegations included:
• Primary Motivation: He believed the HOA “fraudulently sent the courtesy letter.”
• Allegations of Deception:
◦ The HOA lied about the Board members discussing the palm tree issue prior to sending the notice.
◦ Annette McCraw of Trestle Management Group lied to him about speaking with the board.
◦ The HOA deceptively changed the CC&Rs regarding the names of permitted trees.
◦ The HOA failed to disclose the identity of the individual who falsely claimed his palm trees were poisonous.
• Allegations of Misconduct: He stated that Annette McCraw had threatened him with a lawyer.
• Legal Claim: He opined that these actions constituted a violation of the community’s CC&Rs (specifically 8.1.7) and Arizona Revised Statutes § 33-1803.
• Acknowledged Facts: During his testimony, Gregory confirmed that the HOA never imposed any fines and that he received the apology letter issued on August 16, 2018.
Respondent’s Position and Actions
The HOA, represented by Marc Vasquez of Trestle Management Group, maintained that it had taken all necessary steps to rectify its initial error.
• Admission of Error: The Respondent acknowledged that the initial violation notice was sent in error.
• Corrective Measures:
◦ It issued a formal apology letter once the mistake was identified.
◦ The courtesy letter was “removed and expunged” from both the Respondent’s and Petitioner’s records to preserve the Petitioner’s good standing.
◦ Marc Vasquez personally apologized to Gregory at a board meeting.
• No Penalties: The Respondent confirmed that no fines or sanctions were ever imposed on the Petitioner.
• Personnel Status: Vasquez testified that Annette McCraw, the employee accused of misconduct by the Petitioner, was no longer employed by Trestle Management Group.
Administrative Law Judge’s Conclusions and Order
The Administrative Law Judge denied the petition, finding that the Petitioner failed to prove his case by a preponderance of the evidence.
Legal Reasoning
1. Burden of Proof: The decision established that the Petitioner bore the burden of proving that the HOA violated its CC&Rs and state statutes. The standard of proof required was a “preponderance of the evidence,” meaning evidence sufficient to convince a trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not.
2. Failure to Meet Burden: The Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet this standard. This conclusion was based on several key facts established during the hearing:
◦ The Petitioner himself acknowledged that he was never financially penalized.
◦ The Petitioner acknowledged receipt of the HOA’s apology letter.
◦ Evidence showed the palm trees were, in fact, compliant with HOA rules.
◦ The violation notice was officially “removed and expunged” from all records.
3. Mootness of the Issue: The decision states, “the preponderance of the evidence showed Respondent did not violate any rules or regulations that would facilitate any orders or sanctions once it issued the apology letter, thus making the issue moot.” The HOA’s corrective actions effectively nullified the original dispute before it escalated to the point of requiring legal sanctions.
Final Order
“IT IS ORDERED that Petitioners’ petition is denied.”
The decision also included a notice that the order is binding unless a request for rehearing is filed with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the service of the order, pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.09.
Study Guide – 19F-H1919069-REL
Study Guide: Gregory v. Four Seasons at the Manor HOA
This guide provides a comprehensive review of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in case No. 19F-H1919069-REL, concerning Dennis J Gregory and the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association. It includes short-answer questions with an answer key, essay questions for deeper analysis, and a glossary of key terms found within the legal decision.
Quiz: Short-Answer Questions
Answer the following questions in two to three complete sentences, using only information found in the case decision.
1. Who were the primary parties involved in this administrative hearing, and what were their roles?
2. What was the initial action by the Homeowners Association that triggered the dispute with the Petitioner?
3. What specific violations did the Petitioner, Dennis Gregory, allege in his Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition?
4. How did the Respondent discover its error regarding the Petitioner’s palm trees?
5. What two specific actions did the Respondent take to rectify its error before the hearing took place?
6. Why did the Petitioner proceed with the hearing even after the Respondent retracted the violation notice and apologized?
7. Who was Annette McCraw, and what specific actions did the Petitioner accuse her of taking?
8. What is the “preponderance of the evidence,” and what was its significance in the judge’s decision?
9. According to the judge’s findings, why was the central issue of the dispute considered moot?
10. What was the final Order issued by the Administrative Law Judge in this case?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties were Dennis J Gregory, the homeowner, who served as the Petitioner, and the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association, which was the Respondent. Marc Vasquez, vice president of Trestle Management Group, appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
2. The dispute was triggered when the Respondent, on July 13, 2018, sent the Petitioner a courtesy notice requesting the removal of palm trees from his front yard. The notice claimed the trees were a violation of the association’s CC&Rs.
3. The Petitioner alleged that the Respondent violated section 8.1.7 of its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) and the Arizona Revised Statute (A.R.S.) § 33-1803.
4. After the Petitioner disputed the violation, the Respondent conducted a further review. Through this review, the Respondent discovered that the palm trees on the Petitioner’s property were actually listed on the “Recommended Plant List” and were therefore acceptable.
5. First, the Respondent issued a courtesy letter to the Petitioner on August 16, 2018, apologizing for the misunderstanding. Second, the Respondent deemed the original violation notice invalid and had it “removed and expunged” from both its own and the Petitioner’s records to preserve his good standing.
6. The Petitioner proceeded with the hearing because he was upset and believed the Respondent had acted fraudulently. He alleged the Respondent lied about discussing the issue with board members, deceptively changed the CC&Rs, and failed to disclose who made the initial complaint.
7. Annette McCraw was an employee of Trestle Management Group, the Respondent’s management company. The Petitioner accused her of lying about speaking with board members regarding the palm tree issue and threatening him with a lawyer.
8. “Preponderance of the evidence” is the standard of proof required, defined as evidence convincing the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not. Its significance is that the Petitioner bore this burden of proof and ultimately failed to meet it, leading to the denial of his petition.
9. The issue was considered moot because the Respondent had already issued an apology letter and rescinded the violation notice before the hearing occurred. Since the Petitioner was never fined, the palm trees were deemed acceptable, and the notice was expunged, there was no longer an active controversy for the court to resolve.
10. The final Order, issued on September 24, 2019, was that the Petitioner’s petition is denied. The Order was binding unless a rehearing was requested within 30 days.
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Essay Questions
Construct detailed responses to the following prompts, drawing evidence and arguments exclusively from the provided legal decision.
1. Analyze the concept of a “moot” issue as it applies to this case. How did the Respondent’s actions before the hearing render the Petitioner’s primary complaint moot in the eyes of the law, despite the Petitioner’s ongoing grievances?
2. Discuss the burden of proof in this administrative hearing. Explain the “preponderance of the evidence” standard as defined in the document and detail the specific reasons why the Administrative Law Judge concluded that Dennis Gregory failed to meet this burden.
3. Examine the roles and conduct of the management company, Trestle Management Group, and its employee, Annette McCraw. Based on the testimony presented, what specific actions escalated the conflict even after the initial landscaping error was identified and corrected?
4. Trace the timeline of events from the initial “courtesy notice” of July 13, 2018, to the final Order of September 24, 2019. Identify the key turning points and decisions made by both the Petitioner and the Respondent that influenced the outcome of the case.
5. Although the Petitioner lost the case, he raised several allegations beyond the palm trees, including fraud, deception, and threats. Using only the evidence presented in the decision, construct the argument that Dennis Gregory was attempting to make regarding why these subsequent actions constituted a violation of the planned community statute, even if the original tree issue was resolved.
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Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
The official who presides over the administrative hearing and issues a decision. In this case, the ALJ was Antara Nath Rivera.
Answer
The Respondent’s formal written response to the Petition, filed in this case on June 28, 2019.
A.R.S. (Arizona Revised Statutes)
The collection of laws for the state of Arizona. The decision cites A.R.S. § 33-1803, which authorizes HOAs to enforce CC&Rs, and statutes governing the hearing and rehearing process.
Burden of Proof
The obligation of a party to establish its claims by a required degree of evidence. In this hearing, the Petitioner had the burden of proof.
CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions)
The governing documents that establish the rules for a planned community. The Petitioner alleged a violation of section 8.1.7 of the Respondent’s CC&Rs.
Department
The Arizona Department of Real Estate, the state agency with which the Petition was filed and which has jurisdiction over such disputes.
Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition (Petition)
The formal document filed by a homeowner to initiate a hearing with the Department concerning alleged violations by their homeowners association.
A legal term for a situation where the underlying issue has been resolved, making any ruling on the matter unnecessary. The judge found the case moot because the Respondent had already issued an apology and rescinded the violation notice.
The final and binding decision issued by the Administrative Law Judge. In this case, the Order was to deny the Petitioner’s petition.
Petitioner
The party who initiates a legal action or hearing. In this case, the Petitioner was homeowner Dennis J Gregory.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The standard of proof required in this case. It is defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed and who is required to respond. In this case, the Respondent was the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association.
Trestle Management Group, LLC
The management company employed by the Respondent HOA to handle its operations.
Blog Post – 19F-H1919069-REL
An HOA Admitted It Was Wrong. The Homeowner Sued Anyway—And Lost. Here Are the Surprising Reasons Why.
Introduction: The Familiar Dread of an HOA Letter
For many homeowners, few things cause a spike of anxiety quite like a formal notice from their Homeowners Association (HOA). That crisp envelope often contains a violation notice, sparking a frustrating process of proving compliance or making unwanted changes. But what happens when you prove the HOA was completely wrong, they admit their mistake, and issue a full apology? For most, that’s the end of the story—a clear victory.
This, however, is the story of a homeowner who achieved that victory and then decided to take the HOA to a formal hearing anyway. He had been proven right, the violation was erased, and no fines were ever issued. Yet, he pursued the case and ultimately lost.
How could someone who was proven right end up losing their case? The answer reveals a critical distinction between winning an argument and winning in a court of law.
1. You Can Win the Argument, But Still Lose the Case
The initial dispute was straightforward. The homeowner, Dennis Gregory, received a courtesy notice from his HOA requesting the removal of palm trees from his front yard, which were alleged to be in violation of the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).
Mr. Gregory disputed the violation. In response, the HOA conducted a further review and made a critical discovery: the palm trees on the property were, in fact, listed on the HOA’s own “Recommended Plant List” and were perfectly acceptable. The HOA had made a mistake. Here, however, the story takes a surprising turn. Mr. Gregory filed his formal petition for a hearing after the HOA had already admitted its error, apologized, and confirmed the issue was resolved.
This sequence of events is the crucial detail of the case. The legal dispute wasn’t about the palm trees—that argument was already won. The case was about the actions taken after the HOA’s error was acknowledged and corrected.
2. A Proactive Apology Can Be a Powerful Legal Shield
Once the HOA realized its mistake, it took several decisive steps to remedy the situation. According to the Administrative Law Judge’s findings, the HOA and its management company:
• Sent a formal apology letter to the homeowner.
• Confirmed the original courtesy notice was “deemed invalid.”
• “Removed and expunged” the violation from the homeowner’s records to preserve his good standing.
• Never issued any fines or financial penalties.
• Took action regarding personnel, as the employee who the homeowner accused of making threats was no longer with the management company by the time of the hearing.
These corrective actions had a profound legal impact. The judge found that because the HOA had already reversed its initial notice, apologized, cleared the homeowner’s record, and addressed the personnel issue, there was no longer an active dispute to rule on. The issue was considered “moot.”
This conclusion was emphasized in the judge’s final decision:
Furthermore, the preponderance of the evidence showed Respondent did not violate any rules or regulations that would facilitate any orders or sanctions once it issued the apology letter, thus making the issue moot.
3. The Law Requires Proof, Not Just Principle
The homeowner’s petition wasn’t just about the palm trees. He testified that he proceeded with the case because he felt he had been wronged by an HOA management employee during the dispute. His petition alleged the HOA had “fraudulently sent the courtesy letter,” lied about discussing the issue with board members, and even “threatened him with a lawyer.” He wasn’t just seeking to correct the record on his landscaping; he was fighting on a matter of principle.
To win his case, however, the homeowner had to meet a specific legal standard: proving his claims by “a preponderance of the evidence.” In simple terms, this means showing that his version of events was more likely to be true than not.
Ultimately, the judge concluded that the homeowner “failed to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Respondent violated the CC&Rs.” This outcome highlights a crucial legal reality: tangible, documented evidence—such as a formal apology letter and an expunged record—often carries more evidentiary weight than a homeowner’s testimony about verbal statements, which can be viewed as a ‘he said, she said’ dispute without additional proof. While the homeowner may have genuinely felt wronged, his feelings could not overcome the HOA’s documented resolution.
Conclusion: A Cautionary Tale for Homeowners and HOAs
The outcome of this dispute offers a powerful lesson for both homeowners and association boards. It demonstrates three core takeaways: a dispute isn’t over until it’s legally resolved, a swift and comprehensive apology can be an effective legal defense, and a deeply felt principle must still be backed by sufficient evidence to prevail in a formal hearing.
This case serves as a fascinating reminder of the complexities of community disputes, leaving us with a final question: At what point does the fight for principle risk overshadowing a practical victory?
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Dennis J Gregory(petitioner) Appeared and testified on own behalf
Respondent Side
Marc Vasquez(attorney) Trestle Management Group Appeared for Respondent; testified as vice president of Trestle
Annette McCraw(property manager) Trestle Management Group, LLC Issued letter on behalf of Respondent; no longer with Trestle
James A. Baska(management representative) Trestle Management Group Recipient of decision transmission
Neutral Parties
Antara Nath Rivera(ALJ) Office of Administrative Hearings
Judy Lowe(commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate Addressed in transmission of decision
The Petitioner's petition alleging violations of the HOA's CC&Rs and A.R.S. § 33-1803 was denied because the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof. The HOA had acknowledged its error regarding the palm trees, issued an apology, and expunged the record, thereby resolving the substantive dispute and making the remaining allegations moot.
Why this result: Petitioner failed to establish that Respondent violated governing documents or statute when the Respondent had already resolved the underlying issue by apology and expungement, and no financial penalties were assessed.
Key Issues & Findings
Violation of Governing Documents and Planned Community Statute
Petitioner filed a two-issue petition alleging Respondent violated CC&Rs and A.R.S. § 33-1803 by fraudulently sending a courtesy notice regarding unapproved palm trees and subsequently deceiving Petitioner, despite the underlying tree issue being resolved and expunged.
Orders: Petitioner's petition is denied.
Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No
Disposition: petitioner_loss
Cited:
A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
Title 33, Chapter 16.1
A.R.S. § 33-1803
A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(1)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(2)
Analytics Highlights
Topics: HOA dispute, Planned Community Statute, CC&Rs violation, Expungement of record, Mootness
Additional Citations:
A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
Title 33, Chapter 16.1
A.R.S. § 33-1803
A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(1)
A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(2)
Video Overview
Audio Overview
Decision Documents
19F-H1919069-REL Decision – 740332.pdf
Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:34:21 (85.6 KB)
Briefing Doc – 19F-H1919069-REL
Briefing Document: Gregory v. Four Seasons at the Manor HOA (Case No. 19F-H1919069-REL)
Executive Summary
This document provides an analysis of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in Case No. 19F-H1919069-REL, concerning a petition filed by homeowner Dennis Gregory against the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association (HOA). The petition was ultimately denied.
The dispute originated from an incorrect violation notice sent by the HOA on July 13, 2018, regarding palm trees on the Petitioner’s property. The HOA subsequently discovered its error, recognizing the trees were on its “Recommended Plant List.” Consequently, the HOA issued a formal apology to the Petitioner on August 16, 2018, and expunged the violation notice from all records. No fines or penalties were ever imposed.
Despite the resolution, the Petitioner filed a formal dispute petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on May 24, 2019. He alleged the initial notice was fraudulent and that an employee of the HOA’s management company had lied and threatened him. The Administrative Law Judge, Antara Nath Rivera, concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof. The Judge determined that the HOA’s prompt corrective actions—issuing an apology, retracting the notice, and imposing no fines—rendered the issue moot.
Case Overview
The hearing addressed a petition filed by Dennis Gregory alleging that the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association violated its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) and Arizona state law.
Case Detail
Information
Case Number
19F-H1919069-REL
Petitioner
Dennis J Gregory
Respondent
Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association
Presiding Judge
Antara Nath Rivera, Administrative Law Judge
Hearing Date
September 4, 2019
Decision Date
September 24, 2019
Chronology of Events
• July 13, 2018: The HOA sends a courtesy notice to Dennis Gregory requesting the removal of palm trees, citing a violation of the CC&Rs.
• Post-July 13, 2018: Gregory disputes the violation. Upon review, the HOA discovers the palm trees are on its “Recommended Plant List” and therefore permissible.
• August 16, 2018: The HOA sends Gregory a letter of apology via both email and postal mail, deeming the violation notice invalid.
• May 24, 2019: Gregory files a two-issue Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate.
• June 28, 2019: The HOA files its formal answer to the petition.
• September 4, 2019: An administrative hearing is conducted, with testimony from Gregory and Marc Vasquez, Vice President of the HOA’s management company.
• September 24, 2019: The Administrative Law Judge issues a decision denying the petition.
Petitioner’s Allegations and Testimony
Dennis Gregory filed the petition after the palm tree issue was resolved because he was upset with the HOA’s handling of the matter. His testimony and allegations included:
• Primary Motivation: He believed the HOA “fraudulently sent the courtesy letter.”
• Allegations of Deception:
◦ The HOA lied about the Board members discussing the palm tree issue prior to sending the notice.
◦ Annette McCraw of Trestle Management Group lied to him about speaking with the board.
◦ The HOA deceptively changed the CC&Rs regarding the names of permitted trees.
◦ The HOA failed to disclose the identity of the individual who falsely claimed his palm trees were poisonous.
• Allegations of Misconduct: He stated that Annette McCraw had threatened him with a lawyer.
• Legal Claim: He opined that these actions constituted a violation of the community’s CC&Rs (specifically 8.1.7) and Arizona Revised Statutes § 33-1803.
• Acknowledged Facts: During his testimony, Gregory confirmed that the HOA never imposed any fines and that he received the apology letter issued on August 16, 2018.
Respondent’s Position and Actions
The HOA, represented by Marc Vasquez of Trestle Management Group, maintained that it had taken all necessary steps to rectify its initial error.
• Admission of Error: The Respondent acknowledged that the initial violation notice was sent in error.
• Corrective Measures:
◦ It issued a formal apology letter once the mistake was identified.
◦ The courtesy letter was “removed and expunged” from both the Respondent’s and Petitioner’s records to preserve the Petitioner’s good standing.
◦ Marc Vasquez personally apologized to Gregory at a board meeting.
• No Penalties: The Respondent confirmed that no fines or sanctions were ever imposed on the Petitioner.
• Personnel Status: Vasquez testified that Annette McCraw, the employee accused of misconduct by the Petitioner, was no longer employed by Trestle Management Group.
Administrative Law Judge’s Conclusions and Order
The Administrative Law Judge denied the petition, finding that the Petitioner failed to prove his case by a preponderance of the evidence.
Legal Reasoning
1. Burden of Proof: The decision established that the Petitioner bore the burden of proving that the HOA violated its CC&Rs and state statutes. The standard of proof required was a “preponderance of the evidence,” meaning evidence sufficient to convince a trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not.
2. Failure to Meet Burden: The Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet this standard. This conclusion was based on several key facts established during the hearing:
◦ The Petitioner himself acknowledged that he was never financially penalized.
◦ The Petitioner acknowledged receipt of the HOA’s apology letter.
◦ Evidence showed the palm trees were, in fact, compliant with HOA rules.
◦ The violation notice was officially “removed and expunged” from all records.
3. Mootness of the Issue: The decision states, “the preponderance of the evidence showed Respondent did not violate any rules or regulations that would facilitate any orders or sanctions once it issued the apology letter, thus making the issue moot.” The HOA’s corrective actions effectively nullified the original dispute before it escalated to the point of requiring legal sanctions.
Final Order
“IT IS ORDERED that Petitioners’ petition is denied.”
The decision also included a notice that the order is binding unless a request for rehearing is filed with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the service of the order, pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.09.
Study Guide – 19F-H1919069-REL
Study Guide: Gregory v. Four Seasons at the Manor HOA
This guide provides a comprehensive review of the Administrative Law Judge Decision in case No. 19F-H1919069-REL, concerning Dennis J Gregory and the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association. It includes short-answer questions with an answer key, essay questions for deeper analysis, and a glossary of key terms found within the legal decision.
Quiz: Short-Answer Questions
Answer the following questions in two to three complete sentences, using only information found in the case decision.
1. Who were the primary parties involved in this administrative hearing, and what were their roles?
2. What was the initial action by the Homeowners Association that triggered the dispute with the Petitioner?
3. What specific violations did the Petitioner, Dennis Gregory, allege in his Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition?
4. How did the Respondent discover its error regarding the Petitioner’s palm trees?
5. What two specific actions did the Respondent take to rectify its error before the hearing took place?
6. Why did the Petitioner proceed with the hearing even after the Respondent retracted the violation notice and apologized?
7. Who was Annette McCraw, and what specific actions did the Petitioner accuse her of taking?
8. What is the “preponderance of the evidence,” and what was its significance in the judge’s decision?
9. According to the judge’s findings, why was the central issue of the dispute considered moot?
10. What was the final Order issued by the Administrative Law Judge in this case?
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Answer Key
1. The primary parties were Dennis J Gregory, the homeowner, who served as the Petitioner, and the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association, which was the Respondent. Marc Vasquez, vice president of Trestle Management Group, appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
2. The dispute was triggered when the Respondent, on July 13, 2018, sent the Petitioner a courtesy notice requesting the removal of palm trees from his front yard. The notice claimed the trees were a violation of the association’s CC&Rs.
3. The Petitioner alleged that the Respondent violated section 8.1.7 of its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) and the Arizona Revised Statute (A.R.S.) § 33-1803.
4. After the Petitioner disputed the violation, the Respondent conducted a further review. Through this review, the Respondent discovered that the palm trees on the Petitioner’s property were actually listed on the “Recommended Plant List” and were therefore acceptable.
5. First, the Respondent issued a courtesy letter to the Petitioner on August 16, 2018, apologizing for the misunderstanding. Second, the Respondent deemed the original violation notice invalid and had it “removed and expunged” from both its own and the Petitioner’s records to preserve his good standing.
6. The Petitioner proceeded with the hearing because he was upset and believed the Respondent had acted fraudulently. He alleged the Respondent lied about discussing the issue with board members, deceptively changed the CC&Rs, and failed to disclose who made the initial complaint.
7. Annette McCraw was an employee of Trestle Management Group, the Respondent’s management company. The Petitioner accused her of lying about speaking with board members regarding the palm tree issue and threatening him with a lawyer.
8. “Preponderance of the evidence” is the standard of proof required, defined as evidence convincing the trier of fact that a contention is more probably true than not. Its significance is that the Petitioner bore this burden of proof and ultimately failed to meet it, leading to the denial of his petition.
9. The issue was considered moot because the Respondent had already issued an apology letter and rescinded the violation notice before the hearing occurred. Since the Petitioner was never fined, the palm trees were deemed acceptable, and the notice was expunged, there was no longer an active controversy for the court to resolve.
10. The final Order, issued on September 24, 2019, was that the Petitioner’s petition is denied. The Order was binding unless a rehearing was requested within 30 days.
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Essay Questions
Construct detailed responses to the following prompts, drawing evidence and arguments exclusively from the provided legal decision.
1. Analyze the concept of a “moot” issue as it applies to this case. How did the Respondent’s actions before the hearing render the Petitioner’s primary complaint moot in the eyes of the law, despite the Petitioner’s ongoing grievances?
2. Discuss the burden of proof in this administrative hearing. Explain the “preponderance of the evidence” standard as defined in the document and detail the specific reasons why the Administrative Law Judge concluded that Dennis Gregory failed to meet this burden.
3. Examine the roles and conduct of the management company, Trestle Management Group, and its employee, Annette McCraw. Based on the testimony presented, what specific actions escalated the conflict even after the initial landscaping error was identified and corrected?
4. Trace the timeline of events from the initial “courtesy notice” of July 13, 2018, to the final Order of September 24, 2019. Identify the key turning points and decisions made by both the Petitioner and the Respondent that influenced the outcome of the case.
5. Although the Petitioner lost the case, he raised several allegations beyond the palm trees, including fraud, deception, and threats. Using only the evidence presented in the decision, construct the argument that Dennis Gregory was attempting to make regarding why these subsequent actions constituted a violation of the planned community statute, even if the original tree issue was resolved.
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Glossary of Key Terms
Definition
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
The official who presides over the administrative hearing and issues a decision. In this case, the ALJ was Antara Nath Rivera.
Answer
The Respondent’s formal written response to the Petition, filed in this case on June 28, 2019.
A.R.S. (Arizona Revised Statutes)
The collection of laws for the state of Arizona. The decision cites A.R.S. § 33-1803, which authorizes HOAs to enforce CC&Rs, and statutes governing the hearing and rehearing process.
Burden of Proof
The obligation of a party to establish its claims by a required degree of evidence. In this hearing, the Petitioner had the burden of proof.
CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions)
The governing documents that establish the rules for a planned community. The Petitioner alleged a violation of section 8.1.7 of the Respondent’s CC&Rs.
Department
The Arizona Department of Real Estate, the state agency with which the Petition was filed and which has jurisdiction over such disputes.
Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition (Petition)
The formal document filed by a homeowner to initiate a hearing with the Department concerning alleged violations by their homeowners association.
A legal term for a situation where the underlying issue has been resolved, making any ruling on the matter unnecessary. The judge found the case moot because the Respondent had already issued an apology and rescinded the violation notice.
The final and binding decision issued by the Administrative Law Judge. In this case, the Order was to deny the Petitioner’s petition.
Petitioner
The party who initiates a legal action or hearing. In this case, the Petitioner was homeowner Dennis J Gregory.
Preponderance of the Evidence
The standard of proof required in this case. It is defined as “such proof as convinces the trier of fact that the contention is more probably true than not.”
Respondent
The party against whom a petition is filed and who is required to respond. In this case, the Respondent was the Four Seasons at the Manor Homeowners Association.
Trestle Management Group, LLC
The management company employed by the Respondent HOA to handle its operations.
Blog Post – 19F-H1919069-REL
An HOA Admitted It Was Wrong. The Homeowner Sued Anyway—And Lost. Here Are the Surprising Reasons Why.
Introduction: The Familiar Dread of an HOA Letter
For many homeowners, few things cause a spike of anxiety quite like a formal notice from their Homeowners Association (HOA). That crisp envelope often contains a violation notice, sparking a frustrating process of proving compliance or making unwanted changes. But what happens when you prove the HOA was completely wrong, they admit their mistake, and issue a full apology? For most, that’s the end of the story—a clear victory.
This, however, is the story of a homeowner who achieved that victory and then decided to take the HOA to a formal hearing anyway. He had been proven right, the violation was erased, and no fines were ever issued. Yet, he pursued the case and ultimately lost.
How could someone who was proven right end up losing their case? The answer reveals a critical distinction between winning an argument and winning in a court of law.
1. You Can Win the Argument, But Still Lose the Case
The initial dispute was straightforward. The homeowner, Dennis Gregory, received a courtesy notice from his HOA requesting the removal of palm trees from his front yard, which were alleged to be in violation of the community’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).
Mr. Gregory disputed the violation. In response, the HOA conducted a further review and made a critical discovery: the palm trees on the property were, in fact, listed on the HOA’s own “Recommended Plant List” and were perfectly acceptable. The HOA had made a mistake. Here, however, the story takes a surprising turn. Mr. Gregory filed his formal petition for a hearing after the HOA had already admitted its error, apologized, and confirmed the issue was resolved.
This sequence of events is the crucial detail of the case. The legal dispute wasn’t about the palm trees—that argument was already won. The case was about the actions taken after the HOA’s error was acknowledged and corrected.
2. A Proactive Apology Can Be a Powerful Legal Shield
Once the HOA realized its mistake, it took several decisive steps to remedy the situation. According to the Administrative Law Judge’s findings, the HOA and its management company:
• Sent a formal apology letter to the homeowner.
• Confirmed the original courtesy notice was “deemed invalid.”
• “Removed and expunged” the violation from the homeowner’s records to preserve his good standing.
• Never issued any fines or financial penalties.
• Took action regarding personnel, as the employee who the homeowner accused of making threats was no longer with the management company by the time of the hearing.
These corrective actions had a profound legal impact. The judge found that because the HOA had already reversed its initial notice, apologized, cleared the homeowner’s record, and addressed the personnel issue, there was no longer an active dispute to rule on. The issue was considered “moot.”
This conclusion was emphasized in the judge’s final decision:
Furthermore, the preponderance of the evidence showed Respondent did not violate any rules or regulations that would facilitate any orders or sanctions once it issued the apology letter, thus making the issue moot.
3. The Law Requires Proof, Not Just Principle
The homeowner’s petition wasn’t just about the palm trees. He testified that he proceeded with the case because he felt he had been wronged by an HOA management employee during the dispute. His petition alleged the HOA had “fraudulently sent the courtesy letter,” lied about discussing the issue with board members, and even “threatened him with a lawyer.” He wasn’t just seeking to correct the record on his landscaping; he was fighting on a matter of principle.
To win his case, however, the homeowner had to meet a specific legal standard: proving his claims by “a preponderance of the evidence.” In simple terms, this means showing that his version of events was more likely to be true than not.
Ultimately, the judge concluded that the homeowner “failed to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Respondent violated the CC&Rs.” This outcome highlights a crucial legal reality: tangible, documented evidence—such as a formal apology letter and an expunged record—often carries more evidentiary weight than a homeowner’s testimony about verbal statements, which can be viewed as a ‘he said, she said’ dispute without additional proof. While the homeowner may have genuinely felt wronged, his feelings could not overcome the HOA’s documented resolution.
Conclusion: A Cautionary Tale for Homeowners and HOAs
The outcome of this dispute offers a powerful lesson for both homeowners and association boards. It demonstrates three core takeaways: a dispute isn’t over until it’s legally resolved, a swift and comprehensive apology can be an effective legal defense, and a deeply felt principle must still be backed by sufficient evidence to prevail in a formal hearing.
This case serves as a fascinating reminder of the complexities of community disputes, leaving us with a final question: At what point does the fight for principle risk overshadowing a practical victory?
Case Participants
Petitioner Side
Dennis J Gregory(petitioner) Appeared and testified on own behalf
Respondent Side
Marc Vasquez(attorney) Trestle Management Group Appeared for Respondent; testified as vice president of Trestle
Annette McCraw(property manager) Trestle Management Group, LLC Issued letter on behalf of Respondent; no longer with Trestle
James A. Baska(management representative) Trestle Management Group Recipient of decision transmission
Neutral Parties
Antara Nath Rivera(ALJ) Office of Administrative Hearings
Judy Lowe(commissioner) Arizona Department of Real Estate Addressed in transmission of decision