Schafer, Kevin W. & Lawton, Patricia A. v. Sycamore Springs

Case Summary

Case ID 24F-H019-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2024-01-01
Administrative Law Judge Brian Del Vecchio
Outcome total
Filing Fees Refunded $1,000.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Kevin W. Schafer & Patricia A. Lawton Counsel Craig L. Cline
Respondent Sycamore Springs Homeowners Association, INC. Counsel Edith I. Rudder & Eden G. Cohen

Alleged Violations

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1808(B) & CC&Rs Design Guidelines Section II(O)
CC&Rs Design Guidelines Section III(A)

Outcome Summary

Petitioners prevailed on both filed issues: the Respondent's conditional approval of the flagpole violated CC&Rs and statute, and the Violation Notice regarding the building envelope was improper as Petitioners were found to be in compliance (17,451 sq ft vs. 22,000 sq ft maximum). Respondent was ordered to reimburse the $1,000 filing fee. Request for civil penalties was denied.

Key Issues & Findings

Conditional approval of portable flagpole

Respondent conditionally approved Petitioners' DMR for a portable flagpole, but the conditions placed (limiting height, restricting mobility, and requiring placement on the side of the house) were outside the authority granted by the CC&Rs and violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1808, which protects the display of the American flag in front or back yards. Petitioner sustained burden of proof.

Orders: Respondent must abide by the statute; civil penalty denied.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1808(B)
  • CC&Rs Design Guidelines Section II(O)

Violation Notice regarding Building Envelope compliance

Respondent sent a Violation Notice claiming Petitioners' building envelope was 38,000 square feet, exceeding the 22,000 square foot maximum limit defined in DG § III(A). The evidence established Petitioners' actual building envelope was 17,451 square feet, based on a superior 'boots on the ground' survey, proving no violation occurred. Petitioner sustained burden of proof.

Orders: Petitioners' building envelope did not violate the CC&Rs maximum limit; civil penalty denied.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • CC&Rs Design Guidelines Section III(A)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: homeowner dispute, flagpole, building envelope, selective enforcement allegation, CC&R violation, statute violation
Additional Citations:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199 et seq.
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1808
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

24F-H019-REL Decision – 1117050.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T18:02:47 (47.1 KB)

24F-H019-REL Decision – 1121577.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T18:02:50 (52.0 KB)

24F-H019-REL Decision – 1122554.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T18:02:53 (46.1 KB)

24F-H019-REL Decision – 1128513.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T18:02:57 (40.1 KB)

24F-H019-REL Decision – 1128831.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T18:03:02 (149.8 KB)

Questions

Question

Can my HOA prohibit me from displaying the American flag in my front or back yard?

Short Answer

No. Arizona law prevents HOAs from prohibiting the outdoor display of the American flag in front or back yards, regardless of what community documents say.

Detailed Answer

The decision affirms that notwithstanding community documents, an association cannot prohibit the display of the American flag in the front or backyard. In this case, the HOA's attempt to restrict the flag to the side of the house was found to violate state statute.

Alj Quote

Notwithstanding any provision in the community documents, an association shall not prohibit the outdoor front yard or backyard display of . . . [t]he American flag.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1808(A)

Topic Tags

  • flags
  • federal/state rights
  • homeowner rights

Question

Can the HOA restrict the height or mobility of my flagpole if the CC&Rs don't specifically allow them to?

Short Answer

No. If the CC&Rs do not grant the authority to restrict flagpole height or mobility, the HOA cannot impose those conditions.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ found that the HOA violated the CC&Rs by placing conditions on a flagpole approval—specifically height limits and mobility restrictions—that were not authorized by the governing documents.

Alj Quote

Ms. Rawlette admitted the flag pole height and mobility restrictions were inappropriate because the CC&Rs do not grant Respondent authority to restrict flag poles in this manner.

Legal Basis

CC&Rs Interpretation

Topic Tags

  • architectural control
  • CC&Rs
  • flags

Question

If I win my hearing against the HOA, do I get my filing fee back?

Short Answer

Yes. If the petitioner prevails in the hearing, the judge is required to order the HOA to reimburse the filing fee.

Detailed Answer

The decision explicitly states that if a petitioner prevails, the administrative law judge shall order the respondent (HOA) to pay the petitioner the filing fee required by statute.

Alj Quote

If the petitioner prevails, the administrative law judge shall order the respondent to pay to the petitioner the filing fee required by section 32-2199.01.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Topic Tags

  • fees
  • reimbursement
  • prevailing party

Question

Will the judge automatically fine the HOA (civil penalties) if they are found to have violated the rules?

Short Answer

No. Civil penalties may be denied if the violation was due to miscommunication or lack of malicious intent rather than ongoing harassment.

Detailed Answer

Even though the HOA violated the statute regarding flags, the judge denied civil penalties because the violation resulted from a miscommunication by the management company rather than a malicious harassment campaign.

Alj Quote

Petitioner failed to provide sufficient evidence that Respondent’s actions warranted the issuance of civil penalties. The flag pole issue was not an ongoing repetitive harassment campaign, rather, it was miscommunication between the Management Company and Respondent.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Topic Tags

  • civil penalties
  • fines
  • harassment

Question

In a dispute over land measurements (like a building envelope), is an aerial survey or an in-person survey better?

Short Answer

An in-person ('boots on the ground') survey is considered superior to an aerial-only survey.

Detailed Answer

When determining if a homeowner exceeded a building envelope, the ALJ found that an in-person survey was more reliable than an analysis based solely on aerial imagery.

Alj Quote

Mr. McLain and Mr. Teague agreed Mr. McLain’s “boots on the ground” survey is superior to an aerial only survey.

Legal Basis

Evidentiary Standards

Topic Tags

  • evidence
  • property disputes
  • surveys

Question

Who has the burden of proof in an administrative hearing against an HOA?

Short Answer

The homeowner (Petitioner) has the burden to prove the HOA violated the statute or documents by a preponderance of the evidence.

Detailed Answer

The decision clarifies that the party bringing the case bears the burden of proof. This means the homeowner must show that their claims are more likely true than not.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal procedure

Question

What types of disputes can the Arizona Department of Real Estate hear?

Short Answer

Disputes between owners and associations concerning violations of community documents or statutes regulating planned communities.

Detailed Answer

The Department has jurisdiction to hear petitions from owners or associations regarding violations of CC&Rs or state statutes, provided the proper filing procedures are followed.

Alj Quote

The owner or association may petition the department for a hearing concerning violations of community documents or violations of the statutes that regulate planned communities

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199

Topic Tags

  • jurisdiction
  • ADRE authority

Case

Docket No
24F-H019-REL
Case Title
Schafer, Kevin W. & Lawton, Patricia A. v Sycamore Springs Homeowners Association, INC.
Decision Date
2024-01-01
Alj Name
Brian Del Vecchio
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

Can my HOA prohibit me from displaying the American flag in my front or back yard?

Short Answer

No. Arizona law prevents HOAs from prohibiting the outdoor display of the American flag in front or back yards, regardless of what community documents say.

Detailed Answer

The decision affirms that notwithstanding community documents, an association cannot prohibit the display of the American flag in the front or backyard. In this case, the HOA's attempt to restrict the flag to the side of the house was found to violate state statute.

Alj Quote

Notwithstanding any provision in the community documents, an association shall not prohibit the outdoor front yard or backyard display of . . . [t]he American flag.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1808(A)

Topic Tags

  • flags
  • federal/state rights
  • homeowner rights

Question

Can the HOA restrict the height or mobility of my flagpole if the CC&Rs don't specifically allow them to?

Short Answer

No. If the CC&Rs do not grant the authority to restrict flagpole height or mobility, the HOA cannot impose those conditions.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ found that the HOA violated the CC&Rs by placing conditions on a flagpole approval—specifically height limits and mobility restrictions—that were not authorized by the governing documents.

Alj Quote

Ms. Rawlette admitted the flag pole height and mobility restrictions were inappropriate because the CC&Rs do not grant Respondent authority to restrict flag poles in this manner.

Legal Basis

CC&Rs Interpretation

Topic Tags

  • architectural control
  • CC&Rs
  • flags

Question

If I win my hearing against the HOA, do I get my filing fee back?

Short Answer

Yes. If the petitioner prevails in the hearing, the judge is required to order the HOA to reimburse the filing fee.

Detailed Answer

The decision explicitly states that if a petitioner prevails, the administrative law judge shall order the respondent (HOA) to pay the petitioner the filing fee required by statute.

Alj Quote

If the petitioner prevails, the administrative law judge shall order the respondent to pay to the petitioner the filing fee required by section 32-2199.01.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Topic Tags

  • fees
  • reimbursement
  • prevailing party

Question

Will the judge automatically fine the HOA (civil penalties) if they are found to have violated the rules?

Short Answer

No. Civil penalties may be denied if the violation was due to miscommunication or lack of malicious intent rather than ongoing harassment.

Detailed Answer

Even though the HOA violated the statute regarding flags, the judge denied civil penalties because the violation resulted from a miscommunication by the management company rather than a malicious harassment campaign.

Alj Quote

Petitioner failed to provide sufficient evidence that Respondent’s actions warranted the issuance of civil penalties. The flag pole issue was not an ongoing repetitive harassment campaign, rather, it was miscommunication between the Management Company and Respondent.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Topic Tags

  • civil penalties
  • fines
  • harassment

Question

In a dispute over land measurements (like a building envelope), is an aerial survey or an in-person survey better?

Short Answer

An in-person ('boots on the ground') survey is considered superior to an aerial-only survey.

Detailed Answer

When determining if a homeowner exceeded a building envelope, the ALJ found that an in-person survey was more reliable than an analysis based solely on aerial imagery.

Alj Quote

Mr. McLain and Mr. Teague agreed Mr. McLain’s “boots on the ground” survey is superior to an aerial only survey.

Legal Basis

Evidentiary Standards

Topic Tags

  • evidence
  • property disputes
  • surveys

Question

Who has the burden of proof in an administrative hearing against an HOA?

Short Answer

The homeowner (Petitioner) has the burden to prove the HOA violated the statute or documents by a preponderance of the evidence.

Detailed Answer

The decision clarifies that the party bringing the case bears the burden of proof. This means the homeowner must show that their claims are more likely true than not.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal procedure

Question

What types of disputes can the Arizona Department of Real Estate hear?

Short Answer

Disputes between owners and associations concerning violations of community documents or statutes regulating planned communities.

Detailed Answer

The Department has jurisdiction to hear petitions from owners or associations regarding violations of CC&Rs or state statutes, provided the proper filing procedures are followed.

Alj Quote

The owner or association may petition the department for a hearing concerning violations of community documents or violations of the statutes that regulate planned communities

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199

Topic Tags

  • jurisdiction
  • ADRE authority

Case

Docket No
24F-H019-REL
Case Title
Schafer, Kevin W. & Lawton, Patricia A. v Sycamore Springs Homeowners Association, INC.
Decision Date
2024-01-01
Alj Name
Brian Del Vecchio
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Schafer, Kevin W. (petitioner)
  • Lawton, Patricia A. (petitioner/witness)
  • Cline, Craig L. (petitioner attorney)
    Udall Law
  • Mlan, Steven Wallace (witness/surveyor)
    Tucson Surveying and Mapping
    Expert witness for Petitioners

Respondent Side

  • Rudder, Edith I. (HOA attorney)
    Carpenter, Hazelwood, Delgado & Bolen
  • Cohen, Eden G. (HOA attorney)
    Carpenter, Hazelwood, Delgado & Bolen
  • Rowlette, Kristen (board member/witness)
    Sycamore Springs Homeowners Association, INC.
    HOA President
  • Leech, Herbert (board member/witness)
    Sycamore Springs Homeowners Association, INC.
    HOA Vice President
  • Teague, J.O. (witness/surveyor)
    Southern Arizona Land Survey Associates
    Expert witness for Respondent
  • Jennifer (property manager)
    Mission Management
    Sent conditional flag approval letter

Neutral Parties

  • Del Vecchio, Brian (ALJ)
    OAH
    ALJ for December 7 & 12 hearings and final decision
  • Eigenheer, Tammy L. (ALJ)
    OAH
    Signed November 27, 2023 Order
  • Jacio (ALJ)
    OAH
    Identified as ALJ on December 7, 2023
  • Nicolson, Susan (ADRE commissioner)
    ADRE
  • Hansen, A. (ADRE official)
    ADRE
  • Nunez, V. (ADRE official)
    ADRE
  • Jones, D. (ADRE official)
    ADRE
  • Abril, L. (ADRE official)
    ADRE

Other Participants

  • Andrews, Tom (former board member)
    Mentioned in board minutes and testimony regarding past ACC actions
  • Tantis, Pam (former board member)
    Mentioned in board minutes
  • Bloodcot, GMA (resident)
    Recipient of email regarding flag rules

Brenda Norman v. Rancho Del Lago Community Association

Case Summary

Case ID 23F-H046-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2023-08-11
Administrative Law Judge Jenna Clark
Outcome no
Filing Fees Refunded $500.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Brenda Norman Counsel
Respondent Rancho Del Lago Community Association Counsel Michael S. McLeran, Esq.

Alleged Violations

Appendix B, Section 5

Outcome Summary

The petition was dismissed with prejudice because Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof that the HOA violated the community documents. The ALJ found that forcing enforcement of a discretionary restriction after decades of inaction would be unreasonable and that the matter was essentially a neighbor-to-neighbor dispute.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to establish a community document violation by a preponderance of the evidence; enforcement would be an unreasonable exercise of discretion due to long-standing inaction; and there was no legal avenue for the HOA to compel removal of the private property (trees).

Key Issues & Findings

Failure to enforce Prohibited Plant List (Oleanders and Palm Trees exceeding 10 feet)

Petitioner alleged the HOA violated Appendix B, Section 5 of the CC&Rs by failing to enforce the Prohibited Plant List and require her rear neighbors to remove oleander and palm trees that exceeded height guidelines and caused nuisance and damage.

Orders: Petitioner’s petition is dismissed with prejudice.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01(A)(1)
  • ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
  • Tierra Ranchos Homeowners Ass'n v. Kitchukov, 216 Ariz. 195, 165 P.3d 173 (App. 2007)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: homeowner dispute, prohibited plants, HOA discretion, failure to enforce, neighbor dispute, CC&Rs, oleander, palm trees
Additional Citations:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2102
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199 et seq.
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.05
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01(A)(1)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 41-1092 et seq.
  • ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
  • Tierra Ranchos Homeowners Ass'n v. Kitchukov, 216 Ariz. 195, 165 P.3d 173 (App. 2007)

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1049756.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:56:49 (41.2 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1049882.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:56:52 (47.2 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1055238.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:56:55 (50.0 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1057283.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:56:58 (50.3 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1058121.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:57:01 (52.9 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1059849.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:57:04 (52.5 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1072130.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:57:08 (49.8 KB)

23F-H046-REL Decision – 1082955.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:57:11 (155.5 KB)

Questions

Question

Can I force my HOA to remove a neighbor's plants that violate the community's design guidelines?

Short Answer

Generally, no. The HOA often lacks the legal authority to enter private property to remove landscaping, even if it violates guidelines.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ found that there was no legal way for the HOA to remove trees or shrubs from a neighbor's private backyard, nor compel them to be removed, particularly when the HOA does not own or maintain that specific property.

Alj Quote

Regardless, there is no legal avenue by which Respondent could legally remove Neighbors’ backyard Oleanders and/or Palm Trees, or have them removed.

Legal Basis

Property Rights / HOA Authority

Topic Tags

  • enforcement
  • landscaping
  • private property

Question

Does the HOA have to enforce a rule if they haven't enforced it for many years?

Short Answer

No. Sudden enforcement after long periods of inaction may be considered unreasonable.

Detailed Answer

If an HOA has ignored a specific restriction (like a height limit on plants) for decades, enforcing it suddenly against a single homeowner can be seen as an unreasonable exercise of authority and a violation of due process.

Alj Quote

Enforcement, in the face of decades of intentional inaction, would be an unreasonable exercise of authority and a likely deprivation of Neighbors’ due process rights.

Legal Basis

Due Process / Laches / Waiver

Topic Tags

  • selective enforcement
  • waiver
  • due process

Question

Will the Arizona Department of Real Estate resolve a dispute between me and my neighbor?

Short Answer

No. The Department does not have jurisdiction over disputes solely between homeowners.

Detailed Answer

The administrative hearing process is for disputes between a homeowner and the association. It does not cover disputes between two owners where the association is not a party.

Alj Quote

The department does not have jurisdiction to hear [a]ny dispute among or between owners to which the association is not a party.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01(A)(1)

Topic Tags

  • jurisdiction
  • neighbor disputes
  • ADRE

Question

Is the HOA required to mediate disputes between neighbors?

Short Answer

Typically, no. Governing documents usually do not require the HOA to pick sides or resolve neighbor conflicts.

Detailed Answer

Unless the CC&Rs or guidelines specifically state otherwise, the HOA is not obligated to resolve disputes between neighbors or take one side.

Alj Quote

Moreover, neither the CC&Rs nor the Design Guidelines require Respondent to mediate or resolve a dispute between neighbors by taking one side or the other.

Legal Basis

CC&Rs / Design Guidelines

Topic Tags

  • mediation
  • neighbor disputes
  • HOA obligations

Question

What is the burden of proof for a homeowner suing their HOA in an administrative hearing?

Short Answer

The homeowner must prove their case by a 'preponderance of the evidence'.

Detailed Answer

The petitioner (homeowner) must show that it is more likely than not that the HOA violated the governing documents.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated one or more provisions of the Association’s Design Guidelines.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal standards
  • procedure

Question

If my neighbor's trees are causing a nuisance (like debris in my pool), does the HOA have to act?

Short Answer

Not necessarily. Subjective hardship does not automatically mandate HOA enforcement if the rules are discretionary.

Detailed Answer

Even if a neighbor's landscaping causes inconvenience or subjective hardship to another homeowner, the HOA is not required to enforce discretionary guidelines, especially if they have historically not done so.

Alj Quote

It is clear that plant debris from Neighbors’ backyard is causing Petitioner subjective hardship(s) and inconveniences, which amount to a perceived nuisance… [however] Respondent is not required to enforce a flora/height restriction in this instance.

Legal Basis

Discretionary Enforcement

Topic Tags

  • nuisance
  • maintenance
  • discretion

Case

Docket No
23F-H046-REL
Case Title
Brenda Norman vs. Rancho Del Lago Community Association
Decision Date
2023-08-11
Alj Name
Jenna Clark
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Questions

Question

Can I force my HOA to remove a neighbor's plants that violate the community's design guidelines?

Short Answer

Generally, no. The HOA often lacks the legal authority to enter private property to remove landscaping, even if it violates guidelines.

Detailed Answer

The ALJ found that there was no legal way for the HOA to remove trees or shrubs from a neighbor's private backyard, nor compel them to be removed, particularly when the HOA does not own or maintain that specific property.

Alj Quote

Regardless, there is no legal avenue by which Respondent could legally remove Neighbors’ backyard Oleanders and/or Palm Trees, or have them removed.

Legal Basis

Property Rights / HOA Authority

Topic Tags

  • enforcement
  • landscaping
  • private property

Question

Does the HOA have to enforce a rule if they haven't enforced it for many years?

Short Answer

No. Sudden enforcement after long periods of inaction may be considered unreasonable.

Detailed Answer

If an HOA has ignored a specific restriction (like a height limit on plants) for decades, enforcing it suddenly against a single homeowner can be seen as an unreasonable exercise of authority and a violation of due process.

Alj Quote

Enforcement, in the face of decades of intentional inaction, would be an unreasonable exercise of authority and a likely deprivation of Neighbors’ due process rights.

Legal Basis

Due Process / Laches / Waiver

Topic Tags

  • selective enforcement
  • waiver
  • due process

Question

Will the Arizona Department of Real Estate resolve a dispute between me and my neighbor?

Short Answer

No. The Department does not have jurisdiction over disputes solely between homeowners.

Detailed Answer

The administrative hearing process is for disputes between a homeowner and the association. It does not cover disputes between two owners where the association is not a party.

Alj Quote

The department does not have jurisdiction to hear [a]ny dispute among or between owners to which the association is not a party.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01(A)(1)

Topic Tags

  • jurisdiction
  • neighbor disputes
  • ADRE

Question

Is the HOA required to mediate disputes between neighbors?

Short Answer

Typically, no. Governing documents usually do not require the HOA to pick sides or resolve neighbor conflicts.

Detailed Answer

Unless the CC&Rs or guidelines specifically state otherwise, the HOA is not obligated to resolve disputes between neighbors or take one side.

Alj Quote

Moreover, neither the CC&Rs nor the Design Guidelines require Respondent to mediate or resolve a dispute between neighbors by taking one side or the other.

Legal Basis

CC&Rs / Design Guidelines

Topic Tags

  • mediation
  • neighbor disputes
  • HOA obligations

Question

What is the burden of proof for a homeowner suing their HOA in an administrative hearing?

Short Answer

The homeowner must prove their case by a 'preponderance of the evidence'.

Detailed Answer

The petitioner (homeowner) must show that it is more likely than not that the HOA violated the governing documents.

Alj Quote

In this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent violated one or more provisions of the Association’s Design Guidelines.

Legal Basis

ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119

Topic Tags

  • burden of proof
  • legal standards
  • procedure

Question

If my neighbor's trees are causing a nuisance (like debris in my pool), does the HOA have to act?

Short Answer

Not necessarily. Subjective hardship does not automatically mandate HOA enforcement if the rules are discretionary.

Detailed Answer

Even if a neighbor's landscaping causes inconvenience or subjective hardship to another homeowner, the HOA is not required to enforce discretionary guidelines, especially if they have historically not done so.

Alj Quote

It is clear that plant debris from Neighbors’ backyard is causing Petitioner subjective hardship(s) and inconveniences, which amount to a perceived nuisance… [however] Respondent is not required to enforce a flora/height restriction in this instance.

Legal Basis

Discretionary Enforcement

Topic Tags

  • nuisance
  • maintenance
  • discretion

Case

Docket No
23F-H046-REL
Case Title
Brenda Norman vs. Rancho Del Lago Community Association
Decision Date
2023-08-11
Alj Name
Jenna Clark
Tribunal
OAH
Agency
ADRE

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Brenda Norman (petitioner)
    Appeared on her own behalf
  • Zvena Norman (potential witness)
    On standby as a potential witness for Petitioner
  • David Norman (associated party)
    Petitioner's husband; co-petitioner in prior litigation referenced during the hearing

Respondent Side

  • Michael S. McLeran (HOA attorney)
    Childers Hanlon 7 Hudson, PLC
    Counsel for Rancho Del Lago Community Association
  • Spencer Broad (witness, property manager)
    HA managed solutions
    Community Manager for Rancho Del Lago Community Association; also spelled Brod
  • Phil Brown (HOA attorney)
    Attorney referenced by Petitioner regarding a 2018 letter
  • Eric (compliance manager)
    HOA management solutions
    Compliance Manager since 2009; full last name withheld from the record

Neutral Parties

  • Jenna Clark (ALJ)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Administrative Law Judge presiding over the matter
  • Susan Nicolson (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
  • Judge Mahalski (ALJ (prior case))
    Office of Administrative Hearings
    Administrative Law Judge in 2019 litigation referenced during the hearing

Other Participants

  • Cindy White (neighbor)
    Owner of the plants subject to the dispute
  • Ray White (neighbor)
    Owner of the plants subject to the dispute
  • Nathan Tennyson (former HOA attorney)
    Former in-house counsel referenced by Petitioner

Will Schreiber v. Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners

Note: A Rehearing was requested for this case. The dashboard statistics reflect the final outcome of the rehearing process.

Case Summary

Case ID 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2020-03-16
Administrative Law Judge Antara Nath Rivera
Outcome none
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Will Schreiber Counsel Aaron M. Green
Respondent Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association Counsel Mark K. Sahl

Alleged Violations

Design Guidelines HH Walls/View Fences and CC&R’s Article 12.3

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge decision, issued following a rehearing, dismissed the Petitioner's dispute petition, finding that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof to show the HOA violated its governing documents by reasonably denying the retroactive application for the unapproved glass view fence.

Why this result: Petitioner installed the fence prior to seeking approval, failing to comply with the procedural requirements (Design Guidelines Section HH). Consequently, the HOA's denial based on consistency and maintenance concerns was deemed reasonable.

Key Issues & Findings

HOA's denial of Petitioner's glass view fence modification

Petitioner alleged the HOA improperly denied the retroactive approval of a glass view fence installed without prior permission. The ALJ found that Petitioner failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he rightfully sought approval pursuant to Design Guidelines Section HH, and that the Respondent's denial was reasonable due to procedural failure, community inconsistency (Design Guidelines Section E), and liability/maintenance concerns (CC&R Article 12.3).

Orders: Petitioner Will Schreiber’s Petition was dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
  • 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)
  • CC&R’s Article 12.3
  • Design Guidelines Section HH
  • Design Guidelines Section E
  • Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: Homeowner dispute, View fence, Architectural approval, Design Guidelines, CC&R's violation, Retroactive approval, Burden of Proof
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
  • 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)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)
  • A.R.S. § 12-904(A)
  • Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

20F-H2019003-REL-RHG Decision – 769789.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:30:11 (42.2 KB)

20F-H2019003-REL-RHG Decision – 775433.pdf

Uploaded 2026-01-23T17:30:17 (123.4 KB)





Briefing Doc – 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG


Briefing Document: Schreiber v. Cimarron Hills HOA

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the legal proceedings and outcome of the dispute between homeowner Will Schreiber (Petitioner) and the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association (Respondent) concerning an unapproved glass fence. The case, adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings, centered on Mr. Schreiber’s retroactive application for a glass view fence he installed without prior permission, which replaced a wrought iron fence.

The Homeowners Association (HOA) denied the application, citing a lack of consistency with community design standards, as well as significant maintenance and liability concerns stipulated in the governing documents. The Petitioner argued the denial was unreasonable, asserting that a glass fence is visually similar to having no fence (an approved option), that the HOA failed to provide a valid reason for denial, and that safety concerns were unfounded.

The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) ultimately dismissed Mr. Schreiber’s petition. The final decision concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof showing the HOA had violated its own rules. The ruling affirmed that the HOA’s denial was reasonable because the Petitioner did not follow the required procedure of seeking approval before installation, as mandated by the community’s Design Guidelines. The decision underscored the HOA’s right to enforce uniformity and manage its maintenance and liability responsibilities as defined in its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).

Case Identification and Participants

Detail

Information

Case Name

Will Schreiber, Petitioner, vs. Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association, Respondent

Case Number

20F-H2019003-REL-RHG

Tribunal

Office of Administrative Hearings (Arizona)

Administrative Law Judge

Antara Nath Rivera

Petitioner

Will Schreiber

Petitioner’s Counsel

Aaron M. Green, Esq.

Respondent

Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association (a subdivision of McDowell Mountain Ranch Homeowners Association)

Respondent’s Counsel

Nick Nogami, Esq. (at hearing); Mark K. Sahl, Esq. (on record)

Property Address

11551 East Caribbean Lane, Scottsdale, Arizona, 85255

Procedural History and Timeline

1. November 2017: Petitioner submitted an architectural form for backyard work, which was approved by the HOA’s Design Review Committee (DRC). This submission did not mention any changes to fencing.

2. January 2019: During a violation tour, the HOA discovered that Petitioner had replaced the pre-existing wrought iron view fencing with an unapproved glass fence.

3. January 24, 2019: After being contacted by the HOA, Petitioner submitted a second variance request seeking retroactive approval for the installed glass fence.

4. March 5, 2019: The HOA sent a letter to Petitioner requesting that the fence be returned to its original wrought iron condition.

5. May 10, 2019: The HOA officially notified Petitioner that his appeal was denied because the application was not filed in a timely manner (i.e., prior to installation).

6. July 2, 2019: Petitioner filed a Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate, alleging violations of community documents.

7. August 9, 2019: The HOA filed its Answer, denying all claims, and a Motion to Dismiss.

8. October 2, 2019: The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) granted the HOA’s Motion to Dismiss.

9. December 10, 2019: The Department of Real Estate issued a Notice of Rehearing.

10. January 30, 2020: A rehearing was held before the Office of Administrative Hearings.

11. February 4, 2020: The HOA’s counsel submitted a Posthearing Memorandum without leave from the tribunal.

12. February 14, 2020: The ALJ issued an order reopening the record solely to allow the Petitioner an opportunity to respond to the HOA’s unauthorized filing by February 24, 2020.

13. March 16, 2020: The ALJ issued the final decision, ordering that the Petitioner’s petition be dismissed.

Analysis of Arguments

Petitioner’s Position (Will Schreiber)

The Petitioner’s case rested on the argument that the HOA’s denial of his glass fence was arbitrary and unreasonable.

Lack of Justification: Petitioner claimed the HOA’s Design Review Committee (DRC) met with him but failed to provide any verbal or written reasons for the initial disapproval.

Aesthetic and Functional Equivalence: He argued a glass fence is “just as invisible” as having no fence at all, an option permitted by the HOA. He contended that since his neighbor did not have a wrought iron fence, denying his glass fence on grounds of consistency was illogical.

Safety and Maintenance: Petitioner asserted that the safety glass used was comparable to that of the Grand Canyon Skywalk and had been inspected and approved by a Scottsdale City Inspector. He argued the HOA’s concerns about safety, fire barriers, and continuity were manufactured “excuses.” He also offered to waive the HOA’s maintenance responsibility for the fence.

Procedural Failure: The core of the petition was the allegation that the HOA violated its own community documents, specifically “Design Guidelines HH Walls/View Fences and CC&R’s Article 12.”

Respondent’s Position (Cimarron Hills HOA)

The HOA’s defense, presented primarily through the testimony of Whitney Bostic, focused on procedural compliance, community uniformity, and non-negotiable maintenance responsibilities.

Violation of Process: The HOA established that the Petitioner installed the glass fence prior to seeking approval, in direct violation of the Design Guidelines which require submission of detailed plans for any view fence modifications. His approved 2017 plans made no mention of fencing.

Lack of Consistency: Ms. Bostic testified that out of 656 homes in the Cimarron Hills subdivision and 3,800 homes in the master McDowell Mountain Ranch association, none had a glass fence. The established design standard allows only for a wrought iron fence or no fence at all to maintain community conformity.

Maintenance and Liability: The HOA argued that under Article 12.3 of the CC&Rs, it is legally responsible for maintaining the exterior half of all boundary view fences and the five-foot easement from the boundary wall. This responsibility cannot be waived by a homeowner. A glass fence introduces unique maintenance concerns and liability risks, such as shards of glass falling into an area of HOA responsibility.

Multi-Level Review: The decision to deny the request was made after consideration by both the Cimarron Hills DRC and the master association (MMRHA), which weighed factors of consistency, responsibility, and maintenance before issuing a denial.

Governing Documents Cited

The decision in this case was based on the interpretation of several key sections of the community’s governing documents.

CC&Rs Article 12.3 (Boundary Walls and Association Responsibility): This article explicitly states that the Association “shall be responsible for the repair and maintenance of the side of the Boundary Wall which faces the Area of Association Responsibility.” This formed the basis of the HOA’s argument regarding non-waivable liability and maintenance obligations.

Design Guidelines Section HH (View Fencing): This section mandates that “The Owner shall submit for approval from the DRC including detailed drawings of proposed changes… for view fence modifications.” The Petitioner’s failure to do this prior to installation was a central fact in the case. It also specifies the approved paint color for fences, “MMR Brown Fence.”

Design Guidelines Section E (General Principles): This section outlines the DRC’s goal to “maintain consistency of the community and of its decisions.” It notes that variances may be granted but “shall remain consistent with the architectural and neighborhood characteristics.” This supported the HOA’s argument against introducing a unique fence type.

Design Guidelines Section GG (View Decks): While pertaining to decks, this section was cited to show the level of detail required in applications to the DRC, including materials, dimensions, and impact on views, underscoring the formal process the Petitioner bypassed.

Administrative Law Judge’s Decision and Rationale

The ALJ, Antara Nath Rivera, dismissed Will Schreiber’s petition, finding in favor of the Cimarron Hills HOA.

Burden of Proof: The decision established that the Petitioner bore the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the HOA violated Article 12.3 of its CC&Rs.

Failure to Follow Procedure: The judge concluded that the Petitioner “failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he rightfully sought approval to change his existing fence, pursuant to Section HH of the Design Guidelines.” The key issue was not the aesthetics of the fence, but the Petitioner’s failure to abide by the required approval process before installation.

Reasonableness of Denial: The ALJ found that the “Respondent was reasonable in its denial” and “did not violate any rules or regulations.” The evidence demonstrated that the HOA’s decision was based on established principles of uniformity, consistency, and its obligations under the CC&Rs.

Final Order: The petition was formally dismissed. The order noted that as a decision from a rehearing, it is binding on the parties. Any appeal must be filed with the superior court within thirty-five days of the order’s service date.






Study Guide – 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG


Study Guide: Schreiber v. Cimarron Hills HOA

This guide provides a detailed review of the administrative case between Will Schreiber and the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association, based on the provided legal documents. It is designed to test and reinforce understanding of the case’s facts, legal arguments, and procedural history.

Short-Answer Quiz

Answer each of the following questions in two to three sentences, drawing exclusively from the provided source documents.

1. Who were the primary parties involved in this case, and what were their respective roles?

2. What specific action did the Petitioner, Will Schreiber, take that initiated the dispute with the Homeowners Association?

3. According to the Respondent, what were the primary reasons for denying the Petitioner’s request for the glass fence?

4. What was the Petitioner’s core argument regarding the fairness of the Respondent’s denial, particularly in relation to his neighbor?

5. What was the legal standard of proof required for the Petitioner to win his case, and did he meet it?

6. Identify two specific governing documents that were central to the Respondent’s defense and the final ruling.

7. Who was Whitney Bostic, and what key information did her testimony provide during the rehearing?

8. What procedural event occurred on or about February 4, 2020, that prompted the Administrative Law Judge to issue the “Order Holding Record Open” on February 14, 2020?

9. According to the CC&Rs, who is responsible for maintaining the “Boundary Wall” that separates a lot from an “Area of Association Responsibility”?

10. What was the final outcome of the administrative rehearing held on January 30, 2020?

Answer Key

1. The primary parties were Will Schreiber, the Petitioner and homeowner, and the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association, the Respondent. Mr. Schreiber filed a petition against the HOA, alleging a violation of community documents after they denied his request for a fence modification.

2. Mr. Schreiber replaced his preexisting wrought iron view fencing with glass fencing without first receiving approval from the HOA’s Design Review Committee (DRC). He then submitted a variance request on January 24, 2019, seeking retroactive approval for the already-installed fence.

3. The Respondent denied the request based on several factors, including the need for design consistency across the community’s 656 homes, as no other home had a glass fence. They also cited maintenance concerns and potential liability, as the HOA is responsible for the exterior half of view fences and a five-foot easement from the boundary wall.

4. The Petitioner argued that the denial was unreasonable because his neighbor was allowed to have no fence at all. He contended that a glass fence was “just as invisible” as no fence and that the concept was essentially the same.

5. The Petitioner bore the burden of proof to establish his case by a “preponderance of the evidence,” which means convincing the judge that his contention was more probably true than not. The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet this burden.

6. The two central documents were the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Easements for Cimarron Hills (CC&Rs) and the Cimarron Hills Design Guidelines For Community Living (Design Guidelines). The Respondent specifically cited Sections E (General Principles), GG (View Decks), and HH (Walls/View Fences) of the Design Guidelines.

7. Whitney Bostic testified on behalf of the Respondent HOA. She explained that the glass fence was unapproved, inconsistent with the 656 homes in the community, and posed maintenance and liability concerns for the HOA.

8. Counsel for the Respondent submitted a Posthearing Memorandum and Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law without having been granted permission (leave) by the tribunal. Because the Petitioner did not have an opportunity to respond, the judge reopened the record to allow him to do so by February 24, 2020.

9. According to Article 12.3 of the CC&Rs, the resident is responsible for their side of the wall, but the Association is responsible for the repair and maintenance of the side of the Boundary Wall which faces the Area of Association Responsibility.

10. The Administrative Law Judge ordered that Petitioner Will Schreiber’s Petition be dismissed. The judge found that the Respondent HOA’s denial of the glass fence was reasonable and that it did not violate any of its rules or regulations.

Essay Questions

The following questions are designed for longer, more analytical responses. Formulate an argument using only the evidence and facts presented in the source documents.

1. Analyze the procedural timeline of the case from the initial filing of the petition on July 2, 2019, to the final decision on March 16, 2020. Discuss the significance of the initial dismissal, the subsequent rehearing, and the order to reopen the record.

2. Examine the concept of “consistency” as described in Section E of the Design Guidelines. How did this principle form the foundation of the Respondent’s case, and why was it a more compelling argument than the Petitioner’s claims about aesthetics and safety?

3. The Petitioner argued that since his neighbor was permitted to have no fence, his “invisible” glass fence should also be permitted. Deconstruct this argument and explain why it ultimately failed to persuade the Administrative Law Judge, citing the Respondent’s counterarguments regarding maintenance and responsibility.

4. Discuss the role of the governing community documents (the CC&Rs and Design Guidelines) in this dispute. Explain how specific articles, such as CC&R Article 12.3 and Design Guideline Section HH, were applied to the facts of the case to reach a final decision.

5. Define “preponderance of the evidence” as described in the legal decision. Detail the evidence presented by both the Petitioner and the Respondent at the rehearing and evaluate why the Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet this evidentiary standard.

Glossary of Key Terms

Definition

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)

The presiding judge (Antara Nath Rivera) at the Office of Administrative Hearings who heard the evidence and issued the final decision.

Answer

The formal written response filed by the Respondent on August 9, 2019, denying all complaint items in the Petition.

Areas of Association Responsibility

Areas that the Homeowners Association is responsible for maintaining, as defined in the CC&Rs. This includes the exterior side of boundary walls and a five-foot easement.

An acronym for the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Easements for Cimarron Hills, a primary governing document for the community.

Design Guidelines

A document titled Cimarron Hills Design Guidelines For Community Living that supplements the CC&Rs and provides specific rules on community aesthetics, including fences.

Design Review Committee (DRC)

A committee within the HOA responsible for reviewing and approving or denying residents’ proposed architectural and landscape modifications.

Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition

The formal document filed by Will Schreiber with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on July 2, 2019, to initiate the legal dispute.

McDowell Mountain Ranch Homeowners Association (MMRHA)

The master association of which the Cimarron Hills HOA is a subdivision. The MMRHA also considered and denied the Petitioner’s request.

Petitioner

The party who filed the petition initiating the legal action; in this case, the homeowner, Will Schreiber.

Preponderance of the evidence

The standard of proof required in the hearing. It is defined as evidence that is more convincing and has superior weight, inclining an impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the other.

Respondent

The party against whom the petition was filed; in this case, the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association.

Retroactive Approval

Approval sought for a modification or construction that has already been completed without prior authorization.

Variance

A formal exception to the standard Design Guidelines that the DRC may grant on a case-by-case basis.






Blog Post – 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG


The Glass Fence Standoff: 4 Critical Lessons from a Homeowner’s Losing Battle with His HOA

Introduction: The Dream Project and the Unseen Rules

Will Schreiber had a vision for his Scottsdale, Arizona home: a sleek, modern property with an uninterrupted backyard view. To preserve that stunning vista, he installed an elegant glass fence—a choice that seemed perfect for the landscape. His neighbors didn’t complain; in fact, there’s no evidence the fence bothered anyone. But his Homeowners Association (HOA) denied the project, triggering a legal dispute that went before an administrative law judge. Mr. Schreiber ultimately lost.

The conflict wasn’t driven by neighborhood animosity, but by the impersonal application of community documents. This case offers a masterclass in the often counter-intuitive world of HOA governance. The reasons he lost reveal surprising and invaluable lessons for any homeowner considering a modification to their property.

1. The most critical mistake wasn’t the fence—it was the timing.

The core reason the homeowner lost his case had less to do with the aesthetics of glass versus wrought iron and everything to do with procedural failure. He installed the fence before getting formal approval from the HOA.

The timeline of events was fatal to his argument. In November 2017, the HOA approved Mr. Schreiber’s plan for backyard improvements, but this plan made no mention of fencing. At some point after, he installed the unapproved glass fence. It wasn’t until a routine violation tour in January 2019 that the HOA discovered the new fence. Only after being caught, on January 24, 2019, did the homeowner submit a request for retroactive approval.

In the end, the judge’s decision hinged on this sequence. The key question wasn’t whether a glass fence was a good idea, but whether the HOA’s denial was reasonable “because Petitioner failed to abide by the regulations to get approval for the glass fence prior to installing it.” In any dispute with an HOA, following the established process is paramount. Once you break the rules of that process, the merits of your project often become irrelevant.

2. A logical argument can lose to a written rule.

The homeowner presented a seemingly logical and compelling argument. He contended that his neighbor didn’t have a fence at all, and a glass fence was conceptually the same thing. In his words:

A glass fence was “just as invisible” as not having a fence. In essence, both were the same concept.

To add weight to his point, he made a powerful real-world comparison, arguing the safety glass he used was similar to that of the railing of the Grand Canyon Skywalk tourist attraction.

This “common sense” approach, however, failed to persuade the judge. The HOA’s decision wasn’t based on a subjective interpretation of “invisibility” or a comparison to national landmarks. It was based on the binding community documents. The Design Guidelines were written to promote uniformity and consistency. According to the HOA, the established rules were clear: a homeowner could have a wrought iron fence or no fence at all. A glass fence was not an approved option. The lesson here is stark: the governing documents create the binding reality for every member of the community. A personal, logical argument is not a valid defense against a clearly written rule you have contractually agreed to follow.

3. The HOA’s biggest concern wasn’t curb appeal; it was risk.

While the dispute appeared to be about aesthetics, the HOA’s defense focused on much more practical and significant concerns: consistency, maintenance, and liability. These arguments reveal the often-unseen function of an HOA, which is to manage shared risk for the entire community.

The HOA presented several key points:

Consistency: Out of 3,800 homes in the master community and 656 in the sub-community, not a single one had a glass fence. Approving this one would set a precedent that could undermine the community’s uniform design.

Maintenance: The community’s CC&Rs (Article 12.3) explicitly stated the Association was responsible for maintaining “the side of the Boundary Wall which faces the Area of Association Responsibility.” This meant the HOA would be financially and logistically on the hook for repairing and maintaining an unfamiliar and potentially costly material.

Safety & Liability: The HOA raised a critical safety issue. If the glass fence were to break, “large amount of glass shards would fall onto an area of Respondent’s responsibility, causing additional liability for Respondent.”

Sensing the maintenance issue was a key obstacle, Mr. Schreiber made a reasonable offer: he was willing to waive the HOA’s responsibility to maintain the glass fence. However, this proactive solution came too late. Because he had already violated the approval process, his concession was not enough to overcome the HOA’s other concerns about precedent and liability, which remained firmly grounded in the community’s governing documents.

4. In a dispute, you are the one who has to prove the HOA is wrong.

When a homeowner takes their HOA to court, the legal scales are not perfectly balanced from the start. The legal decision in this case clearly states the principle: “Petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that Respondent violated Article 12.3 of its CC&Rs.”

In simple terms, “burden of proof” meant it was Mr. Schreiber’s job to convince the judge with a “preponderance of the evidence”—meaning it was more likely true than not—that the HOA had broken its own rules when it denied his request. It was not the HOA’s job to prove it was right; it was his job to prove they were wrong.

The judge ultimately found that the homeowner “failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he rightfully sought approval.” The conclusion was that the “Respondent was reasonable in its denial.” It is not enough to feel you have been wronged; in a legal setting, you must be able to demonstrate with convincing evidence that the organization violated its own governing documents.

Conclusion: The Unwritten Lessons of Community Living

HOA rules can be a source of frustration, but this case demonstrates that they form a complex web of process, liability, and shared responsibility that exists for reasons beyond simple aesthetics. The homeowner’s dream of a glass fence was shattered not by a neighbor’s complaint, but by a series of procedural missteps and a misunderstanding of the contract he was bound by.

This case wasn’t just about a fence; it was about the power of a contract you agree to when you buy a home. How well do you really know your own community’s rulebook?


Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Will Schreiber (petitioner)
    Complainant
  • Aaron M. Green (petitioner attorney)
    Law Office of Aaron Green, P.C.

Respondent Side

  • Nick Nogami (respondent attorney)
    Represented Respondent at hearing
  • Mark K. Sahl (respondent attorney)
    CARPENTER, HAZLEWOOD, DELGADO & BOLEN LLP
  • Whitney Bostic (witness)
    Testified for Respondent

Neutral Parties

  • Antara Nath Rivera (ALJ)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Judy Lowe (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Other Participants

  • c. serrano (clerk)
    Transmitting agent for Order
  • LDettorre (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • AHansen (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • djones (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • DGardner (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • ncano (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission

Will Schreiber v. Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners

Note: A Rehearing was requested for this case. The dashboard statistics reflect the final outcome of the rehearing process.

Case Summary

Case ID 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2020-03-16
Administrative Law Judge Antara Nath Rivera
Outcome none
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Will Schreiber Counsel Aaron M. Green
Respondent Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association Counsel Mark K. Sahl

Alleged Violations

CC&R's Article 12; Design Guidelines HH Walls/View Fences

Outcome Summary

The Petitioner's dispute petition was dismissed because the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof that the HOA violated its governing documents regarding the denial of a retroactively submitted view fence modification.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof to establish the HOA violated its CC&Rs or Design Guidelines. Specifically, the Petitioner did not establish he rightfully sought approval prior to installing the fence.

Key Issues & Findings

HOA's denial of Petitioner's glass view fence modification

Petitioner alleged the HOA violated community documents by denying approval for a glass view fence installed without prior approval. The ALJ found Petitioner failed to establish the HOA violated its documents, as Petitioner did not follow required procedures for seeking approval.

Orders: Petitioner Will Schreiber’s Petition was dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.07(G)(2)
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119(A)
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119(B)(1)
  • CC&R's Article 12.3
  • Design Guidelines Section HH

Analytics Highlights

Topics: Homeowner dispute, View fence, Architectural approval, Design Guidelines, CC&R's violation, Retroactive application
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
  • 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)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)
  • A.R.S. § 12-904(A)
  • Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)

Video Overview

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

20F-H2019003-REL-RHG Decision – 769789.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:34:30 (42.2 KB)

20F-H2019003-REL-RHG Decision – 775433.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:34:30 (123.4 KB)





Briefing Doc – 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG


Briefing Document: Schreiber v. Cimarron Hills HOA

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the legal proceedings and outcome of the dispute between homeowner Will Schreiber (Petitioner) and the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association (Respondent) concerning an unapproved glass fence. The case, adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings, centered on Mr. Schreiber’s retroactive application for a glass view fence he installed without prior permission, which replaced a wrought iron fence.

The Homeowners Association (HOA) denied the application, citing a lack of consistency with community design standards, as well as significant maintenance and liability concerns stipulated in the governing documents. The Petitioner argued the denial was unreasonable, asserting that a glass fence is visually similar to having no fence (an approved option), that the HOA failed to provide a valid reason for denial, and that safety concerns were unfounded.

The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) ultimately dismissed Mr. Schreiber’s petition. The final decision concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof showing the HOA had violated its own rules. The ruling affirmed that the HOA’s denial was reasonable because the Petitioner did not follow the required procedure of seeking approval before installation, as mandated by the community’s Design Guidelines. The decision underscored the HOA’s right to enforce uniformity and manage its maintenance and liability responsibilities as defined in its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).

Case Identification and Participants

Detail

Information

Case Name

Will Schreiber, Petitioner, vs. Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association, Respondent

Case Number

20F-H2019003-REL-RHG

Tribunal

Office of Administrative Hearings (Arizona)

Administrative Law Judge

Antara Nath Rivera

Petitioner

Will Schreiber

Petitioner’s Counsel

Aaron M. Green, Esq.

Respondent

Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association (a subdivision of McDowell Mountain Ranch Homeowners Association)

Respondent’s Counsel

Nick Nogami, Esq. (at hearing); Mark K. Sahl, Esq. (on record)

Property Address

11551 East Caribbean Lane, Scottsdale, Arizona, 85255

Procedural History and Timeline

1. November 2017: Petitioner submitted an architectural form for backyard work, which was approved by the HOA’s Design Review Committee (DRC). This submission did not mention any changes to fencing.

2. January 2019: During a violation tour, the HOA discovered that Petitioner had replaced the pre-existing wrought iron view fencing with an unapproved glass fence.

3. January 24, 2019: After being contacted by the HOA, Petitioner submitted a second variance request seeking retroactive approval for the installed glass fence.

4. March 5, 2019: The HOA sent a letter to Petitioner requesting that the fence be returned to its original wrought iron condition.

5. May 10, 2019: The HOA officially notified Petitioner that his appeal was denied because the application was not filed in a timely manner (i.e., prior to installation).

6. July 2, 2019: Petitioner filed a Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate, alleging violations of community documents.

7. August 9, 2019: The HOA filed its Answer, denying all claims, and a Motion to Dismiss.

8. October 2, 2019: The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) granted the HOA’s Motion to Dismiss.

9. December 10, 2019: The Department of Real Estate issued a Notice of Rehearing.

10. January 30, 2020: A rehearing was held before the Office of Administrative Hearings.

11. February 4, 2020: The HOA’s counsel submitted a Posthearing Memorandum without leave from the tribunal.

12. February 14, 2020: The ALJ issued an order reopening the record solely to allow the Petitioner an opportunity to respond to the HOA’s unauthorized filing by February 24, 2020.

13. March 16, 2020: The ALJ issued the final decision, ordering that the Petitioner’s petition be dismissed.

Analysis of Arguments

Petitioner’s Position (Will Schreiber)

The Petitioner’s case rested on the argument that the HOA’s denial of his glass fence was arbitrary and unreasonable.

Lack of Justification: Petitioner claimed the HOA’s Design Review Committee (DRC) met with him but failed to provide any verbal or written reasons for the initial disapproval.

Aesthetic and Functional Equivalence: He argued a glass fence is “just as invisible” as having no fence at all, an option permitted by the HOA. He contended that since his neighbor did not have a wrought iron fence, denying his glass fence on grounds of consistency was illogical.

Safety and Maintenance: Petitioner asserted that the safety glass used was comparable to that of the Grand Canyon Skywalk and had been inspected and approved by a Scottsdale City Inspector. He argued the HOA’s concerns about safety, fire barriers, and continuity were manufactured “excuses.” He also offered to waive the HOA’s maintenance responsibility for the fence.

Procedural Failure: The core of the petition was the allegation that the HOA violated its own community documents, specifically “Design Guidelines HH Walls/View Fences and CC&R’s Article 12.”

Respondent’s Position (Cimarron Hills HOA)

The HOA’s defense, presented primarily through the testimony of Whitney Bostic, focused on procedural compliance, community uniformity, and non-negotiable maintenance responsibilities.

Violation of Process: The HOA established that the Petitioner installed the glass fence prior to seeking approval, in direct violation of the Design Guidelines which require submission of detailed plans for any view fence modifications. His approved 2017 plans made no mention of fencing.

Lack of Consistency: Ms. Bostic testified that out of 656 homes in the Cimarron Hills subdivision and 3,800 homes in the master McDowell Mountain Ranch association, none had a glass fence. The established design standard allows only for a wrought iron fence or no fence at all to maintain community conformity.

Maintenance and Liability: The HOA argued that under Article 12.3 of the CC&Rs, it is legally responsible for maintaining the exterior half of all boundary view fences and the five-foot easement from the boundary wall. This responsibility cannot be waived by a homeowner. A glass fence introduces unique maintenance concerns and liability risks, such as shards of glass falling into an area of HOA responsibility.

Multi-Level Review: The decision to deny the request was made after consideration by both the Cimarron Hills DRC and the master association (MMRHA), which weighed factors of consistency, responsibility, and maintenance before issuing a denial.

Governing Documents Cited

The decision in this case was based on the interpretation of several key sections of the community’s governing documents.

CC&Rs Article 12.3 (Boundary Walls and Association Responsibility): This article explicitly states that the Association “shall be responsible for the repair and maintenance of the side of the Boundary Wall which faces the Area of Association Responsibility.” This formed the basis of the HOA’s argument regarding non-waivable liability and maintenance obligations.

Design Guidelines Section HH (View Fencing): This section mandates that “The Owner shall submit for approval from the DRC including detailed drawings of proposed changes… for view fence modifications.” The Petitioner’s failure to do this prior to installation was a central fact in the case. It also specifies the approved paint color for fences, “MMR Brown Fence.”

Design Guidelines Section E (General Principles): This section outlines the DRC’s goal to “maintain consistency of the community and of its decisions.” It notes that variances may be granted but “shall remain consistent with the architectural and neighborhood characteristics.” This supported the HOA’s argument against introducing a unique fence type.

Design Guidelines Section GG (View Decks): While pertaining to decks, this section was cited to show the level of detail required in applications to the DRC, including materials, dimensions, and impact on views, underscoring the formal process the Petitioner bypassed.

Administrative Law Judge’s Decision and Rationale

The ALJ, Antara Nath Rivera, dismissed Will Schreiber’s petition, finding in favor of the Cimarron Hills HOA.

Burden of Proof: The decision established that the Petitioner bore the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the HOA violated Article 12.3 of its CC&Rs.

Failure to Follow Procedure: The judge concluded that the Petitioner “failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he rightfully sought approval to change his existing fence, pursuant to Section HH of the Design Guidelines.” The key issue was not the aesthetics of the fence, but the Petitioner’s failure to abide by the required approval process before installation.

Reasonableness of Denial: The ALJ found that the “Respondent was reasonable in its denial” and “did not violate any rules or regulations.” The evidence demonstrated that the HOA’s decision was based on established principles of uniformity, consistency, and its obligations under the CC&Rs.

Final Order: The petition was formally dismissed. The order noted that as a decision from a rehearing, it is binding on the parties. Any appeal must be filed with the superior court within thirty-five days of the order’s service date.






Study Guide – 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG


Study Guide: Schreiber v. Cimarron Hills HOA

This guide provides a detailed review of the administrative case between Will Schreiber and the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association, based on the provided legal documents. It is designed to test and reinforce understanding of the case’s facts, legal arguments, and procedural history.

Short-Answer Quiz

Answer each of the following questions in two to three sentences, drawing exclusively from the provided source documents.

1. Who were the primary parties involved in this case, and what were their respective roles?

2. What specific action did the Petitioner, Will Schreiber, take that initiated the dispute with the Homeowners Association?

3. According to the Respondent, what were the primary reasons for denying the Petitioner’s request for the glass fence?

4. What was the Petitioner’s core argument regarding the fairness of the Respondent’s denial, particularly in relation to his neighbor?

5. What was the legal standard of proof required for the Petitioner to win his case, and did he meet it?

6. Identify two specific governing documents that were central to the Respondent’s defense and the final ruling.

7. Who was Whitney Bostic, and what key information did her testimony provide during the rehearing?

8. What procedural event occurred on or about February 4, 2020, that prompted the Administrative Law Judge to issue the “Order Holding Record Open” on February 14, 2020?

9. According to the CC&Rs, who is responsible for maintaining the “Boundary Wall” that separates a lot from an “Area of Association Responsibility”?

10. What was the final outcome of the administrative rehearing held on January 30, 2020?

Answer Key

1. The primary parties were Will Schreiber, the Petitioner and homeowner, and the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association, the Respondent. Mr. Schreiber filed a petition against the HOA, alleging a violation of community documents after they denied his request for a fence modification.

2. Mr. Schreiber replaced his preexisting wrought iron view fencing with glass fencing without first receiving approval from the HOA’s Design Review Committee (DRC). He then submitted a variance request on January 24, 2019, seeking retroactive approval for the already-installed fence.

3. The Respondent denied the request based on several factors, including the need for design consistency across the community’s 656 homes, as no other home had a glass fence. They also cited maintenance concerns and potential liability, as the HOA is responsible for the exterior half of view fences and a five-foot easement from the boundary wall.

4. The Petitioner argued that the denial was unreasonable because his neighbor was allowed to have no fence at all. He contended that a glass fence was “just as invisible” as no fence and that the concept was essentially the same.

5. The Petitioner bore the burden of proof to establish his case by a “preponderance of the evidence,” which means convincing the judge that his contention was more probably true than not. The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet this burden.

6. The two central documents were the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Easements for Cimarron Hills (CC&Rs) and the Cimarron Hills Design Guidelines For Community Living (Design Guidelines). The Respondent specifically cited Sections E (General Principles), GG (View Decks), and HH (Walls/View Fences) of the Design Guidelines.

7. Whitney Bostic testified on behalf of the Respondent HOA. She explained that the glass fence was unapproved, inconsistent with the 656 homes in the community, and posed maintenance and liability concerns for the HOA.

8. Counsel for the Respondent submitted a Posthearing Memorandum and Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law without having been granted permission (leave) by the tribunal. Because the Petitioner did not have an opportunity to respond, the judge reopened the record to allow him to do so by February 24, 2020.

9. According to Article 12.3 of the CC&Rs, the resident is responsible for their side of the wall, but the Association is responsible for the repair and maintenance of the side of the Boundary Wall which faces the Area of Association Responsibility.

10. The Administrative Law Judge ordered that Petitioner Will Schreiber’s Petition be dismissed. The judge found that the Respondent HOA’s denial of the glass fence was reasonable and that it did not violate any of its rules or regulations.

Essay Questions

The following questions are designed for longer, more analytical responses. Formulate an argument using only the evidence and facts presented in the source documents.

1. Analyze the procedural timeline of the case from the initial filing of the petition on July 2, 2019, to the final decision on March 16, 2020. Discuss the significance of the initial dismissal, the subsequent rehearing, and the order to reopen the record.

2. Examine the concept of “consistency” as described in Section E of the Design Guidelines. How did this principle form the foundation of the Respondent’s case, and why was it a more compelling argument than the Petitioner’s claims about aesthetics and safety?

3. The Petitioner argued that since his neighbor was permitted to have no fence, his “invisible” glass fence should also be permitted. Deconstruct this argument and explain why it ultimately failed to persuade the Administrative Law Judge, citing the Respondent’s counterarguments regarding maintenance and responsibility.

4. Discuss the role of the governing community documents (the CC&Rs and Design Guidelines) in this dispute. Explain how specific articles, such as CC&R Article 12.3 and Design Guideline Section HH, were applied to the facts of the case to reach a final decision.

5. Define “preponderance of the evidence” as described in the legal decision. Detail the evidence presented by both the Petitioner and the Respondent at the rehearing and evaluate why the Judge concluded that the Petitioner failed to meet this evidentiary standard.

Glossary of Key Terms

Definition

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)

The presiding judge (Antara Nath Rivera) at the Office of Administrative Hearings who heard the evidence and issued the final decision.

Answer

The formal written response filed by the Respondent on August 9, 2019, denying all complaint items in the Petition.

Areas of Association Responsibility

Areas that the Homeowners Association is responsible for maintaining, as defined in the CC&Rs. This includes the exterior side of boundary walls and a five-foot easement.

An acronym for the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Easements for Cimarron Hills, a primary governing document for the community.

Design Guidelines

A document titled Cimarron Hills Design Guidelines For Community Living that supplements the CC&Rs and provides specific rules on community aesthetics, including fences.

Design Review Committee (DRC)

A committee within the HOA responsible for reviewing and approving or denying residents’ proposed architectural and landscape modifications.

Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition

The formal document filed by Will Schreiber with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on July 2, 2019, to initiate the legal dispute.

McDowell Mountain Ranch Homeowners Association (MMRHA)

The master association of which the Cimarron Hills HOA is a subdivision. The MMRHA also considered and denied the Petitioner’s request.

Petitioner

The party who filed the petition initiating the legal action; in this case, the homeowner, Will Schreiber.

Preponderance of the evidence

The standard of proof required in the hearing. It is defined as evidence that is more convincing and has superior weight, inclining an impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the other.

Respondent

The party against whom the petition was filed; in this case, the Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association.

Retroactive Approval

Approval sought for a modification or construction that has already been completed without prior authorization.

Variance

A formal exception to the standard Design Guidelines that the DRC may grant on a case-by-case basis.






Blog Post – 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG


The Glass Fence Standoff: 4 Critical Lessons from a Homeowner’s Losing Battle with His HOA

Introduction: The Dream Project and the Unseen Rules

Will Schreiber had a vision for his Scottsdale, Arizona home: a sleek, modern property with an uninterrupted backyard view. To preserve that stunning vista, he installed an elegant glass fence—a choice that seemed perfect for the landscape. His neighbors didn’t complain; in fact, there’s no evidence the fence bothered anyone. But his Homeowners Association (HOA) denied the project, triggering a legal dispute that went before an administrative law judge. Mr. Schreiber ultimately lost.

The conflict wasn’t driven by neighborhood animosity, but by the impersonal application of community documents. This case offers a masterclass in the often counter-intuitive world of HOA governance. The reasons he lost reveal surprising and invaluable lessons for any homeowner considering a modification to their property.

1. The most critical mistake wasn’t the fence—it was the timing.

The core reason the homeowner lost his case had less to do with the aesthetics of glass versus wrought iron and everything to do with procedural failure. He installed the fence before getting formal approval from the HOA.

The timeline of events was fatal to his argument. In November 2017, the HOA approved Mr. Schreiber’s plan for backyard improvements, but this plan made no mention of fencing. At some point after, he installed the unapproved glass fence. It wasn’t until a routine violation tour in January 2019 that the HOA discovered the new fence. Only after being caught, on January 24, 2019, did the homeowner submit a request for retroactive approval.

In the end, the judge’s decision hinged on this sequence. The key question wasn’t whether a glass fence was a good idea, but whether the HOA’s denial was reasonable “because Petitioner failed to abide by the regulations to get approval for the glass fence prior to installing it.” In any dispute with an HOA, following the established process is paramount. Once you break the rules of that process, the merits of your project often become irrelevant.

2. A logical argument can lose to a written rule.

The homeowner presented a seemingly logical and compelling argument. He contended that his neighbor didn’t have a fence at all, and a glass fence was conceptually the same thing. In his words:

A glass fence was “just as invisible” as not having a fence. In essence, both were the same concept.

To add weight to his point, he made a powerful real-world comparison, arguing the safety glass he used was similar to that of the railing of the Grand Canyon Skywalk tourist attraction.

This “common sense” approach, however, failed to persuade the judge. The HOA’s decision wasn’t based on a subjective interpretation of “invisibility” or a comparison to national landmarks. It was based on the binding community documents. The Design Guidelines were written to promote uniformity and consistency. According to the HOA, the established rules were clear: a homeowner could have a wrought iron fence or no fence at all. A glass fence was not an approved option. The lesson here is stark: the governing documents create the binding reality for every member of the community. A personal, logical argument is not a valid defense against a clearly written rule you have contractually agreed to follow.

3. The HOA’s biggest concern wasn’t curb appeal; it was risk.

While the dispute appeared to be about aesthetics, the HOA’s defense focused on much more practical and significant concerns: consistency, maintenance, and liability. These arguments reveal the often-unseen function of an HOA, which is to manage shared risk for the entire community.

The HOA presented several key points:

Consistency: Out of 3,800 homes in the master community and 656 in the sub-community, not a single one had a glass fence. Approving this one would set a precedent that could undermine the community’s uniform design.

Maintenance: The community’s CC&Rs (Article 12.3) explicitly stated the Association was responsible for maintaining “the side of the Boundary Wall which faces the Area of Association Responsibility.” This meant the HOA would be financially and logistically on the hook for repairing and maintaining an unfamiliar and potentially costly material.

Safety & Liability: The HOA raised a critical safety issue. If the glass fence were to break, “large amount of glass shards would fall onto an area of Respondent’s responsibility, causing additional liability for Respondent.”

Sensing the maintenance issue was a key obstacle, Mr. Schreiber made a reasonable offer: he was willing to waive the HOA’s responsibility to maintain the glass fence. However, this proactive solution came too late. Because he had already violated the approval process, his concession was not enough to overcome the HOA’s other concerns about precedent and liability, which remained firmly grounded in the community’s governing documents.

4. In a dispute, you are the one who has to prove the HOA is wrong.

When a homeowner takes their HOA to court, the legal scales are not perfectly balanced from the start. The legal decision in this case clearly states the principle: “Petitioner bears the burden of proof to establish that Respondent violated Article 12.3 of its CC&Rs.”

In simple terms, “burden of proof” meant it was Mr. Schreiber’s job to convince the judge with a “preponderance of the evidence”—meaning it was more likely true than not—that the HOA had broken its own rules when it denied his request. It was not the HOA’s job to prove it was right; it was his job to prove they were wrong.

The judge ultimately found that the homeowner “failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he rightfully sought approval.” The conclusion was that the “Respondent was reasonable in its denial.” It is not enough to feel you have been wronged; in a legal setting, you must be able to demonstrate with convincing evidence that the organization violated its own governing documents.

Conclusion: The Unwritten Lessons of Community Living

HOA rules can be a source of frustration, but this case demonstrates that they form a complex web of process, liability, and shared responsibility that exists for reasons beyond simple aesthetics. The homeowner’s dream of a glass fence was shattered not by a neighbor’s complaint, but by a series of procedural missteps and a misunderstanding of the contract he was bound by.

This case wasn’t just about a fence; it was about the power of a contract you agree to when you buy a home. How well do you really know your own community’s rulebook?


Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Will Schreiber (petitioner)
    Complainant
  • Aaron M. Green (petitioner attorney)
    Law Office of Aaron Green, P.C.

Respondent Side

  • Nick Nogami (respondent attorney)
    Represented Respondent at hearing
  • Mark K. Sahl (respondent attorney)
    CARPENTER, HAZLEWOOD, DELGADO & BOLEN LLP
  • Whitney Bostic (witness)
    Testified for Respondent

Neutral Parties

  • Antara Nath Rivera (ALJ)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Judy Lowe (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Other Participants

  • c. serrano (clerk)
    Transmitting agent for Order
  • LDettorre (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • AHansen (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • djones (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • DGardner (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • ncano (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission

Will Schreiber vs. Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners

Case Summary

Case ID 20F-H2019003-REL-RHG
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2020-03-16
Administrative Law Judge Antara Nath Rivera
Outcome none
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Will Schreiber Counsel Aaron M. Green
Respondent Cimarron Hills at McDowell Mountain Homeowners Association Counsel Mark K. Sahl

Alleged Violations

Design Guidelines HH Walls/View Fences and CC&R’s Article 12.3

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge decision, issued following a rehearing, dismissed the Petitioner's dispute petition, finding that the Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof to show the HOA violated its governing documents by reasonably denying the retroactive application for the unapproved glass view fence.

Why this result: Petitioner installed the fence prior to seeking approval, failing to comply with the procedural requirements (Design Guidelines Section HH). Consequently, the HOA's denial based on consistency and maintenance concerns was deemed reasonable.

Key Issues & Findings

HOA's denial of Petitioner's glass view fence modification

Petitioner alleged the HOA improperly denied the retroactive approval of a glass view fence installed without prior permission. The ALJ found that Petitioner failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he rightfully sought approval pursuant to Design Guidelines Section HH, and that the Respondent's denial was reasonable due to procedural failure, community inconsistency (Design Guidelines Section E), and liability/maintenance concerns (CC&R Article 12.3).

Orders: Petitioner Will Schreiber’s Petition was dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
  • 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)
  • CC&R’s Article 12.3
  • Design Guidelines Section HH
  • Design Guidelines Section E
  • Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: Homeowner dispute, View fence, Architectural approval, Design Guidelines, CC&R's violation, Retroactive approval, Burden of Proof
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 32-2199(B)
  • 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)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)
  • A.R.S. § 12-904(A)
  • Vazanno v. Superior Court, 74 Ariz. 369, 372, 249 P.2d 837 (1952)

Decision Documents

20F-H2019003-REL Decision – 769789.pdf

Uploaded 2025-12-17T18:18:00 (42.2 KB)

20F-H2019003-REL Decision – 775433.pdf

Uploaded 2025-12-17T18:18:00 (123.4 KB)

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Will Schreiber (petitioner)
  • Aaron M. Green (petitioner attorney)
    Law Office of Aaron Green, P.C.

Respondent Side

  • Nick Nogami (respondent attorney)
  • Mark K. Sahl (respondent attorney)
    CARPENTER, HAZLEWOOD, DELGADO & BOLEN LLP
  • Whitney Bostic (witness)

Neutral Parties

  • Antara Nath Rivera (ALJ)
    Office of Administrative Hearings
  • Judy Lowe (Commissioner)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate

Other Participants

  • c. serrano (clerk)
    Transmitted order/document
  • LDettorre (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • AHansen (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • djones (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • DGardner (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission
  • ncano (ADRE staff)
    Arizona Department of Real Estate
    Recipient of transmission