George E Lord vs. The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association

Case Summary

Case ID 19F-H1918013-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2018-12-17
Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer
Outcome no
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner George E Lord Counsel
Respondent The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association Counsel Maria Kupillas

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1242, A.R.S. § 33-1260.01, and CC&Rs

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge dismissed the Petition in its entirety, concluding that the Petitioner failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the Respondent Condominium Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1242, A.R.S. § 33-1260.01, or the association's CC&Rs.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to establish a violation of any statute or covenant alleged. The core findings supported the HOA's position that the lessee was engaging in prohibited business activity and subletting, and that the charged attorney fees were permissible.

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violations concerning notice procedures, leasing restrictions, prohibited business use, and excessive fees.

Petitioner alleged Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1242 by failing to include proper citations in violation notices, violated A.R.S. § 33-1260.01 and CC&Rs by imposing illegal restrictions on occupancy dates and prohibiting tenant guests, and violated fee limits under A.R.S. § 33-1260.01(E) by charging $250 in attorney fees.

Orders: The Petition was dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1242
  • A.R.S. § 33-1260.01
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119
  • CC&Rs Section 7.21
  • CC&Rs Section 7.3

Analytics Highlights

Topics: condominium, HOA dispute, leasing restrictions, short-term rental, business use, notice procedure, attorney fees
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1242
  • A.R.S. § 33-1260.01
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119
  • CC&Rs Section 7.21
  • CC&Rs Section 7.3

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

19F-H1918013-REL Decision – 677039.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:07:17 (115.9 KB)

19F-H1918013-REL Decision – 677040.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:07:18 (47.9 KB)





Briefing Doc – 19F-H1918013-REL


Briefing: Administrative Law Judge Decision in Lord v. The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the findings and conclusions of the Administrative Law Judge in Case No. 19F-H1918013-REL, a dispute between unit owner George E. Lord (Petitioner) and The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association (Respondent). The Petitioner alleged that the Respondent violated multiple Arizona statutes and its own governing documents by suspending amenity access and levying fees related to a complex leasing arrangement. The Judge ultimately dismissed the petition in its entirety, finding that the Petitioner failed to prove any violations. The central issue revolved around the Petitioner’s tenant, Barrie Shepley, who leased three units to house clients for his commercial fitness camps. The Judge concluded this arrangement constituted a prohibited business use and a form of subletting, justifying the Association’s enforcement actions, including the suspension of amenities. The ruling affirmed the Association’s right to regulate occupancy to prevent an “itinerant population” and upheld its procedural actions regarding violation notices and the charging of attorney’s fees.

——————————————————————————–

Case Overview

This matter was brought before the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings to resolve a dispute between a condominium unit owner and the homeowners association (HOA) regarding alleged violations of leasing policies and state law.

Case Number

19F-H1918013-REL

Petitioner

George E. Lord

Respondent

The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association

Hearing Date

November 26, 2018

Decision Date

December 17, 2018

Presiding Judge

Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer

Procedural Background

1. On August 31, 2018, George Lord filed a petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging that The Boulders HOA had violated Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1242, A.R.S. § 33-1260.01, and the association’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).

2. The Respondent filed an answer on September 25, 2018, denying all allegations.

3. A hearing was conducted by the Office of Administrative Hearings on November 26, 2018, where both parties presented evidence and arguments.

——————————————————————————–

Core Dispute and Factual Background

The dispute originated from leases for three condominium units owned by the Petitioner. The central conflict was whether the occupants were legitimate guests of a primary lessee or participants in a short-term rental business that violated the community’s governing documents.

The Leasing Arrangement

Lessee: The Petitioner, George Lord, leased two units to Barrie Shepley on December 4, 2017, for a term of March 7, 2018, to April 30, 2018. A third lease was transferred to a unit owned by the Petitioner on January 15, 2018.

Lessee’s Business: Mr. Shepley operated a Canadian fitness business named “Personal Best,” which offered training camps in the Tucson area.

Use of Units: The leased units at The Boulders were used to provide accommodations for clients attending six fitness camps scheduled between March 8 and April 29, 2018.

Pricing Structure: The cost of the camp varied based on the living arrangements. The price per person decreased as more campers shared a single condo:

Four campers per condo: $950.00 each

Three campers per condo: $1,075.00 each

Two campers per condo: $1,299.00 each

• It was noted that no fitness instruction was scheduled to occur on The Boulders’ property.

HOA Intervention and Consequences

Initial Action: On March 9, 2018, The Boulders’ Community Manager, Danielle Morris, emailed the Petitioner expressing concern that Mr. Shepley was “subleasing your units out to different people in violation of the CC&R’s” for terms less than the 30-day minimum. The HOA deactivated the amenity access cards for all three units.

Escalation: After email exchanges where the Petitioner argued the occupants were merely “guests,” the HOA maintained that it required the names of all occupants and proof of a minimum 30-day stay for each.

Notices of Violation: On March 18, 2018, the Petitioner received formal Notices of Violations for the three units. The notices stated that amenity access was suspended because the HOA had not been provided “the names of the adult occupants residing in the unit or the timeframes of the occupant’s stay.” The notice warned that a $300 fine could be applied.

Legal Fees: On March 22, 2018, the Petitioner received a letter from the Respondent’s counsel asserting the HOA’s legal position and stating that $250.00 in attorney’s fees had already been incurred and were due from the Petitioner.

Financial Loss: On April 2, 2018, Mr. Shepley canceled the remainder of the leases due to the lack of amenity access for his clients. The Petitioner claimed a resulting loss of $6,900.00 in rental income for April 2018.

——————————————————————————–

Judicial Findings and Legal Conclusions

The Administrative Law Judge analyzed three distinct allegations made by the Petitioner and found that he failed to meet the burden of proof for any of them. The petition was ultimately dismissed.

Alleged Violation 1: A.R.S. § 33-1242 (Adequacy of Violation Notice)

Petitioner’s Claim: The HOA violated the statute because its initial Notices of Violations failed to cite the specific provision of the governing documents that had allegedly been violated.

Judge’s Conclusion: The Judge found no violation. A.R.S. § 33-1242(C) requires an association to provide the specific provision only after the unit owner has sent a written response to the initial notice via certified mail. The Petitioner admitted he did not respond to the Notices of Violations. Therefore, the HOA’s obligation to provide a specific citation was never triggered.

Alleged Violation 2: A.R.S. § 33-1260.01 & CC&Rs (Leasing and Business Use)

Petitioner’s Claim: The HOA improperly demanded the dates of each occupant’s stay and incorrectly insisted that each occupant must stay for a minimum of 30 days. He argued that since he had a valid 30-day lease with Mr. Shepley, the occupants were simply guests.

Governing Documents:

CC&R Section 7.21: Requires all leases to be for a term of not less than 30 days.

CC&R Section 7.3: Prohibits any “gainful occupation, profession, trade or other nonresidential use” in a unit if “the business activity does not involve persons coming to the Unit.”

Judge’s Conclusion: The Judge rejected the Petitioner’s “guest” argument. The arrangement was determined to be a form of subletting for a business.

◦ The variable pricing structure, where the camp fee changed based on the number of people in a unit, demonstrated that accommodation was being sold, not merely provided to guests.

◦ Mr. Shepley was operating a business from the units in a manner that required people (his clients) to come to the unit, a direct violation of CC&R Section 7.3.

◦ The Judge noted the situation fell “between the cracks of the specific language of the statutes,” but concluded that “the spirit and purpose of the applicable rules is to allow an association to know who is in the community and to prevent an itinerant population.”

Alleged Violation 3: A.R.S. § 33-1260.01(E) (Improper Fees)

Petitioner’s Claim: The $250 charge from the HOA’s counsel constituted an illegal fee, penalty, or assessment. The HOA’s policy allows for a $300 fine for lease violations.

Judge’s Conclusion: The Judge found no violation. The evidence showed that the HOA had not actually assessed the $300 fine. The $250 charge was “clearly for attorney fees related to the possible collection of assessments.” The Judge stated that “Nothing in the cited statute or the CC&Rs prohibits such a charge being implemented.”

——————————————————————————–

Final Order

Based on the failure of the Petitioner to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the Respondent violated any statutes or its CC&Rs, the Judge issued a final order:

“IT IS ORDERED that the Petition be dismissed.”

The decision is binding unless a rehearing is requested with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the service of the order.


George E Lord vs. The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association

Case Summary

Case ID 19F-H1918013-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2018-12-17
Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer
Outcome no
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner George E Lord Counsel
Respondent The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association Counsel Maria Kupillas

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1242, A.R.S. § 33-1260.01, and CC&Rs

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge dismissed the Petition in its entirety, concluding that the Petitioner failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the Respondent Condominium Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1242, A.R.S. § 33-1260.01, or the association's CC&Rs.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to establish a violation of any statute or covenant alleged. The core findings supported the HOA's position that the lessee was engaging in prohibited business activity and subletting, and that the charged attorney fees were permissible.

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violations concerning notice procedures, leasing restrictions, prohibited business use, and excessive fees.

Petitioner alleged Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1242 by failing to include proper citations in violation notices, violated A.R.S. § 33-1260.01 and CC&Rs by imposing illegal restrictions on occupancy dates and prohibiting tenant guests, and violated fee limits under A.R.S. § 33-1260.01(E) by charging $250 in attorney fees.

Orders: The Petition was dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1242
  • A.R.S. § 33-1260.01
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119
  • CC&Rs Section 7.21
  • CC&Rs Section 7.3

Analytics Highlights

Topics: condominium, HOA dispute, leasing restrictions, short-term rental, business use, notice procedure, attorney fees
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1242
  • A.R.S. § 33-1260.01
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119
  • CC&Rs Section 7.21
  • CC&Rs Section 7.3

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

19F-H1918013-REL Decision – 677039.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:33:32 (115.9 KB)

19F-H1918013-REL Decision – 677040.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:33:32 (47.9 KB)





Briefing Doc – 19F-H1918013-REL


Briefing: Administrative Law Judge Decision in Lord v. The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the findings and conclusions of the Administrative Law Judge in Case No. 19F-H1918013-REL, a dispute between unit owner George E. Lord (Petitioner) and The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association (Respondent). The Petitioner alleged that the Respondent violated multiple Arizona statutes and its own governing documents by suspending amenity access and levying fees related to a complex leasing arrangement. The Judge ultimately dismissed the petition in its entirety, finding that the Petitioner failed to prove any violations. The central issue revolved around the Petitioner’s tenant, Barrie Shepley, who leased three units to house clients for his commercial fitness camps. The Judge concluded this arrangement constituted a prohibited business use and a form of subletting, justifying the Association’s enforcement actions, including the suspension of amenities. The ruling affirmed the Association’s right to regulate occupancy to prevent an “itinerant population” and upheld its procedural actions regarding violation notices and the charging of attorney’s fees.

——————————————————————————–

Case Overview

This matter was brought before the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings to resolve a dispute between a condominium unit owner and the homeowners association (HOA) regarding alleged violations of leasing policies and state law.

Case Number

19F-H1918013-REL

Petitioner

George E. Lord

Respondent

The Boulders at La Reserve Condominium Association

Hearing Date

November 26, 2018

Decision Date

December 17, 2018

Presiding Judge

Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer

Procedural Background

1. On August 31, 2018, George Lord filed a petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging that The Boulders HOA had violated Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1242, A.R.S. § 33-1260.01, and the association’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs).

2. The Respondent filed an answer on September 25, 2018, denying all allegations.

3. A hearing was conducted by the Office of Administrative Hearings on November 26, 2018, where both parties presented evidence and arguments.

——————————————————————————–

Core Dispute and Factual Background

The dispute originated from leases for three condominium units owned by the Petitioner. The central conflict was whether the occupants were legitimate guests of a primary lessee or participants in a short-term rental business that violated the community’s governing documents.

The Leasing Arrangement

Lessee: The Petitioner, George Lord, leased two units to Barrie Shepley on December 4, 2017, for a term of March 7, 2018, to April 30, 2018. A third lease was transferred to a unit owned by the Petitioner on January 15, 2018.

Lessee’s Business: Mr. Shepley operated a Canadian fitness business named “Personal Best,” which offered training camps in the Tucson area.

Use of Units: The leased units at The Boulders were used to provide accommodations for clients attending six fitness camps scheduled between March 8 and April 29, 2018.

Pricing Structure: The cost of the camp varied based on the living arrangements. The price per person decreased as more campers shared a single condo:

Four campers per condo: $950.00 each

Three campers per condo: $1,075.00 each

Two campers per condo: $1,299.00 each

• It was noted that no fitness instruction was scheduled to occur on The Boulders’ property.

HOA Intervention and Consequences

Initial Action: On March 9, 2018, The Boulders’ Community Manager, Danielle Morris, emailed the Petitioner expressing concern that Mr. Shepley was “subleasing your units out to different people in violation of the CC&R’s” for terms less than the 30-day minimum. The HOA deactivated the amenity access cards for all three units.

Escalation: After email exchanges where the Petitioner argued the occupants were merely “guests,” the HOA maintained that it required the names of all occupants and proof of a minimum 30-day stay for each.

Notices of Violation: On March 18, 2018, the Petitioner received formal Notices of Violations for the three units. The notices stated that amenity access was suspended because the HOA had not been provided “the names of the adult occupants residing in the unit or the timeframes of the occupant’s stay.” The notice warned that a $300 fine could be applied.

Legal Fees: On March 22, 2018, the Petitioner received a letter from the Respondent’s counsel asserting the HOA’s legal position and stating that $250.00 in attorney’s fees had already been incurred and were due from the Petitioner.

Financial Loss: On April 2, 2018, Mr. Shepley canceled the remainder of the leases due to the lack of amenity access for his clients. The Petitioner claimed a resulting loss of $6,900.00 in rental income for April 2018.

——————————————————————————–

Judicial Findings and Legal Conclusions

The Administrative Law Judge analyzed three distinct allegations made by the Petitioner and found that he failed to meet the burden of proof for any of them. The petition was ultimately dismissed.

Alleged Violation 1: A.R.S. § 33-1242 (Adequacy of Violation Notice)

Petitioner’s Claim: The HOA violated the statute because its initial Notices of Violations failed to cite the specific provision of the governing documents that had allegedly been violated.

Judge’s Conclusion: The Judge found no violation. A.R.S. § 33-1242(C) requires an association to provide the specific provision only after the unit owner has sent a written response to the initial notice via certified mail. The Petitioner admitted he did not respond to the Notices of Violations. Therefore, the HOA’s obligation to provide a specific citation was never triggered.

Alleged Violation 2: A.R.S. § 33-1260.01 & CC&Rs (Leasing and Business Use)

Petitioner’s Claim: The HOA improperly demanded the dates of each occupant’s stay and incorrectly insisted that each occupant must stay for a minimum of 30 days. He argued that since he had a valid 30-day lease with Mr. Shepley, the occupants were simply guests.

Governing Documents:

CC&R Section 7.21: Requires all leases to be for a term of not less than 30 days.

CC&R Section 7.3: Prohibits any “gainful occupation, profession, trade or other nonresidential use” in a unit if “the business activity does not involve persons coming to the Unit.”

Judge’s Conclusion: The Judge rejected the Petitioner’s “guest” argument. The arrangement was determined to be a form of subletting for a business.

◦ The variable pricing structure, where the camp fee changed based on the number of people in a unit, demonstrated that accommodation was being sold, not merely provided to guests.

◦ Mr. Shepley was operating a business from the units in a manner that required people (his clients) to come to the unit, a direct violation of CC&R Section 7.3.

◦ The Judge noted the situation fell “between the cracks of the specific language of the statutes,” but concluded that “the spirit and purpose of the applicable rules is to allow an association to know who is in the community and to prevent an itinerant population.”

Alleged Violation 3: A.R.S. § 33-1260.01(E) (Improper Fees)

Petitioner’s Claim: The $250 charge from the HOA’s counsel constituted an illegal fee, penalty, or assessment. The HOA’s policy allows for a $300 fine for lease violations.

Judge’s Conclusion: The Judge found no violation. The evidence showed that the HOA had not actually assessed the $300 fine. The $250 charge was “clearly for attorney fees related to the possible collection of assessments.” The Judge stated that “Nothing in the cited statute or the CC&Rs prohibits such a charge being implemented.”

——————————————————————————–

Final Order

Based on the failure of the Petitioner to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the Respondent violated any statutes or its CC&Rs, the Judge issued a final order:

“IT IS ORDERED that the Petition be dismissed.”

The decision is binding unless a rehearing is requested with the Commissioner of the Department of Real Estate within 30 days of the service of the order.


Michael and Nancy Berent vs, Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 18F-H1818047-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2018-09-11
Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer
Outcome total_loss
Filing Fees Refunded $2,000.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Michael and Nancy Berent Counsel
Respondent Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association Counsel Maria Kupillas

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1803(B); CC&Rs Sections 8.02, 8.06, 6.02

Outcome Summary

The Petition was dismissed in its entirety because the Petitioners failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association violated the cited CC&Rs provisions (Sections 8.02, 8.06, 6.02) or A.R.S. § 33-1803(B).

Why this result: Petitioners failed to meet the burden of proof required to establish the alleged violations.

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violations regarding failure to enforce city fire and municipal codes, failure to procure adequate insurance, and violations of specific CC&R provisions (8.02, 8.06, 6.02)

Petitioners alleged the HOA violated governing documents and statute by approving a neighbor's driveway extension which allegedly violated municipal codes and an easement, and by failing to maintain a properly constituted Architectural Committee. Petitioners failed to establish these violations by a preponderance of the evidence.

Orders: The Petition was dismissed in its entirety.

Filing fee: $2,000.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1803(B)
  • CC&Rs Section 8.02
  • CC&Rs Section 8.06
  • CC&Rs Section 6.02

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA enforcement, CC&R violation, Architectural Committee, driveway extension, easement, municipal codes
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1803(B)
  • A.R.S. § 41-2198.01
  • CC&Rs Section 8.02
  • CC&Rs Section 8.06
  • CC&Rs Section 6.02

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 659285.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:05:46 (142.7 KB)

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 659287.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:05:47 (193.9 KB)

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 679550.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:05:47 (133.6 KB)

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 952813.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:05:47 (42.6 KB)

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 952828.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:05:48 (30.5 KB)





Briefing Doc – 18F-H1818047-REL


Administrative Hearing Briefing: Berent v. Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the administrative hearing decision in case number 18F-H1818047-REL, involving petitioners Michael and Nancy Berent and the respondent, Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association (HOA). The core of the dispute was the HOA’s 2015 approval of a driveway extension for the Berents’ neighbors, which the Berents alleged violated multiple HOA Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) as well as Arizona state law.

On September 11, 2018, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Tammy L. Eigenheer issued a decision dismissing the Berents’ petition in its entirety. The judge concluded that the petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof—to establish their claims by a preponderance of the evidence—on all four of their central allegations. Specifically, the ALJ found no violation regarding the composition of the HOA’s Architectural Review Committee (ARC), the interpretation of CC&Rs concerning structures and easements, or the HOA’s discretionary authority to enforce its rules.

Notably, a subsequent “Minute Entry” filed on March 8, 2022, indicates that the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) had been receiving further documents from the petitioners years after the case was closed. The OAH clarified that it no longer had jurisdiction and would take no further action on the matter.

1. Case Overview

The dispute was adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings after the petitioners filed a Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on April 26, 2018.

Case Detail

Information

Case Number

18F-H1818047-REL

Petitioners

Michael and Nancy Berent

Respondent

Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association

Office of Administrative Hearings (Phoenix, Arizona)

Tammy L. Eigenheer

Hearing Dates

August 15, 2018, and August 22, 2018

Decision Date

September 11, 2018

2. Central Allegations and Rulings

At the hearing, the petitioners’ claims were clarified into four distinct allegations of violation by the HOA. The ALJ ruled against the petitioners on every count, finding they failed to provide sufficient evidence.

2.1. Allegation 1: Violation of CC&R Section 6.02 (ARC Membership)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent argued that the Architectural Review Committee (ARC) was not properly composed of the required three members when it approved the neighbor’s driveway application. Her evidence consisted of Board of Directors meeting minutes from 2015 and 2016 that listed only a single individual (Ken Hawkins or Larry Bolton) as presenting the ARC report. She contended this proved the ARC had only one member at those times.

Respondent’s Position: Regis Salazar of VISION Community Management testified that the ARC consisted of three members at all relevant times. She explained that the meeting minutes cited by the petitioner merely identified the individual presenting the committee’s report to the board, not the entire committee’s membership.

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The petitioners failed to establish a violation. The respondent’s testimony provided a credible explanation for the format of the meeting minutes, which was the petitioners’ only evidence for this claim.

2.2. Allegation 2: Violation of CC&R Section 8.02 (Structures & Municipal Codes)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent testified that the ARC should not have approved the driveway application because it demonstrated a clear violation of City of Surprise municipal codes on its face, specifically asserting the 10-foot extension caused the driveway to exceed 50 percent of the front lot line. The CC&Rs require structures to comply with municipal regulations.

Respondent’s Position: Ms. Salazar stated that the HOA places the responsibility on each homeowner to ensure their projects comply with all applicable municipal codes. The ARC does not independently verify compliance. The approval notice sent to the neighbor explicitly stated, “You also must follow all local building codes and setback requirements, if applicable.

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The petitioners failed to establish that the driveway qualified as a “structure” under the definition relevant to Section 8.02. Furthermore, the judge noted that even if it were considered a structure, the HOA did not have a duty or responsibility under this CC&R section to pre-emptively enforce municipal codes.

2.3. Allegation 3: Violation of CC&R Section 8.06 (Obstruction of Easements)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent testified that a fire hydrant located near the property line constituted a “public utility easement” and that the neighbor’s driveway extension was a structure placed upon it, interfering with its use in violation of the CC&Rs.

Respondent’s Position: Ms. Salazar testified she was not aware of any public utility easement associated with the fire hydrant.

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The petitioners failed on two points. First, they presented “no evidence to establish that the fire hydrant at issue constituted a public utility easement.” Second, even assuming it was an easement, they failed to prove the driveway obstructed it. This conclusion was decisively supported by Ms. Berent’s own testimony, in which she “acknowledged… that a residential fire occurred two houses away from her and the fire department had to use the fire hydrant… the fire hose was running across Neighbors’ driveway during that time.” This demonstrated the hydrant remained fully accessible and usable.

2.4. Allegation 4: Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1803(B) (Failure to Enforce)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent argued that “common sense” required the HOA to enforce its CC&Rs and penalize the neighbors for the violations, drawing a comparison to the HOA sending her notices for weeds in her yard.

Respondent’s Position: The HOA argued that it chose not to pursue enforcement action against the neighbors because the City of Surprise, after issuing an initial Notice of Ordinance Violation, had itself “declined to pursue any further enforcement action.”

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The judge pointed to the “plain language” of the statute, which states the board of directors may impose penalties, establishing this as a discretionary power, not a mandatory duty. Nothing in the statute required the HOA to take enforcement action. The HOA’s decision not to act, mirroring the city’s own lack of follow-up, was a valid exercise of its authority.

3. Key Chronology of Events

July 7, 2015: The petitioners’ neighbors submit an “Application for Design Review” to install a 10-foot by 35-foot concrete driveway extension.

July 15, 2015: The HOA’s Architectural Review Committee (ARC) approves the application.

July 17, 2015: VISION Community Management sends an approval notice to the neighbors with conditions, including adherence to a 13-inch property line setback and all local building codes.

August 2015: The neighbors begin construction. The petitioners email the HOA board to complain about the project, questioning city approval and raising concerns about a nearby fire hydrant.

May 16, 2016: The City of Surprise issues a “Notice of Ordinance Violation” to the neighbors, stating a “driveway extension was added contrary to code requirements.”

Post-May 2016: The City of Surprise takes no further enforcement action against the neighbors.

April 26, 2018: The Berents file their HOA Dispute Petition.

August 15 & 22, 2018: The administrative hearing is held.

September 11, 2018: The ALJ issues the final decision, ordering that the petition be dismissed in its entirety.

March 8, 2022: The ALJ issues a “Minute Entry – Document Reject,” noting that the OAH has no jurisdiction and will not consider further documents submitted by the petitioners.

4. Post-Decision Developments

On March 8, 2022, nearly three and a half years after the case was closed, ALJ Tammy L. Eigenheer issued a “Minute Entry – Document Reject.” This entry states:

“It is unclear why the Office of Administrative Hearings was sent these documents as the decision in this matter was issued on September 11, 2018, and the Office of Administrative Hearings has had no jurisdiction in this matter since that time.”

The entry advises the petitioners that no documents sent after the decision would be considered and that “no further response will be provided from the Office of Administrative Hearings” for any future filings.

5. Quoted Provisions and Statutes

The case revolved around the interpretation of the following sections of the Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association CC&Rs and Arizona Revised Statutes.

CC&R Section 6.02 (Membership):

CC&R Section 8.02 (Restrictions Apply to All Structures):

CC&R Section 8.06 (No Obstruction of Easements):

A.R.S. § 33-1803(B):


Michael and Nancy Berent vs, Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 18F-H1818047-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2018-09-11
Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer
Outcome total_loss
Filing Fees Refunded $2,000.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Michael and Nancy Berent Counsel
Respondent Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association Counsel Maria Kupillas

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1803(B); CC&Rs Sections 8.02, 8.06, 6.02

Outcome Summary

The Petition was dismissed in its entirety because the Petitioners failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association violated the cited CC&Rs provisions (Sections 8.02, 8.06, 6.02) or A.R.S. § 33-1803(B).

Why this result: Petitioners failed to meet the burden of proof required to establish the alleged violations.

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violations regarding failure to enforce city fire and municipal codes, failure to procure adequate insurance, and violations of specific CC&R provisions (8.02, 8.06, 6.02)

Petitioners alleged the HOA violated governing documents and statute by approving a neighbor's driveway extension which allegedly violated municipal codes and an easement, and by failing to maintain a properly constituted Architectural Committee. Petitioners failed to establish these violations by a preponderance of the evidence.

Orders: The Petition was dismissed in its entirety.

Filing fee: $2,000.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1803(B)
  • CC&Rs Section 8.02
  • CC&Rs Section 8.06
  • CC&Rs Section 6.02

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA enforcement, CC&R violation, Architectural Committee, driveway extension, easement, municipal codes
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1803(B)
  • A.R.S. § 41-2198.01
  • CC&Rs Section 8.02
  • CC&Rs Section 8.06
  • CC&Rs Section 6.02

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 659285.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:32:56 (142.7 KB)

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 659287.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:32:56 (193.9 KB)

18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 679550.pdf

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18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 952813.pdf

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18F-H1818047-REL Decision – 952828.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:32:56 (30.5 KB)





Briefing Doc – 18F-H1818047-REL


Administrative Hearing Briefing: Berent v. Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the administrative hearing decision in case number 18F-H1818047-REL, involving petitioners Michael and Nancy Berent and the respondent, Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association (HOA). The core of the dispute was the HOA’s 2015 approval of a driveway extension for the Berents’ neighbors, which the Berents alleged violated multiple HOA Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) as well as Arizona state law.

On September 11, 2018, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Tammy L. Eigenheer issued a decision dismissing the Berents’ petition in its entirety. The judge concluded that the petitioners failed to meet their burden of proof—to establish their claims by a preponderance of the evidence—on all four of their central allegations. Specifically, the ALJ found no violation regarding the composition of the HOA’s Architectural Review Committee (ARC), the interpretation of CC&Rs concerning structures and easements, or the HOA’s discretionary authority to enforce its rules.

Notably, a subsequent “Minute Entry” filed on March 8, 2022, indicates that the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) had been receiving further documents from the petitioners years after the case was closed. The OAH clarified that it no longer had jurisdiction and would take no further action on the matter.

1. Case Overview

The dispute was adjudicated by the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings after the petitioners filed a Homeowners Association Dispute Process Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate on April 26, 2018.

Case Detail

Information

Case Number

18F-H1818047-REL

Petitioners

Michael and Nancy Berent

Respondent

Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association

Office of Administrative Hearings (Phoenix, Arizona)

Tammy L. Eigenheer

Hearing Dates

August 15, 2018, and August 22, 2018

Decision Date

September 11, 2018

2. Central Allegations and Rulings

At the hearing, the petitioners’ claims were clarified into four distinct allegations of violation by the HOA. The ALJ ruled against the petitioners on every count, finding they failed to provide sufficient evidence.

2.1. Allegation 1: Violation of CC&R Section 6.02 (ARC Membership)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent argued that the Architectural Review Committee (ARC) was not properly composed of the required three members when it approved the neighbor’s driveway application. Her evidence consisted of Board of Directors meeting minutes from 2015 and 2016 that listed only a single individual (Ken Hawkins or Larry Bolton) as presenting the ARC report. She contended this proved the ARC had only one member at those times.

Respondent’s Position: Regis Salazar of VISION Community Management testified that the ARC consisted of three members at all relevant times. She explained that the meeting minutes cited by the petitioner merely identified the individual presenting the committee’s report to the board, not the entire committee’s membership.

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The petitioners failed to establish a violation. The respondent’s testimony provided a credible explanation for the format of the meeting minutes, which was the petitioners’ only evidence for this claim.

2.2. Allegation 2: Violation of CC&R Section 8.02 (Structures & Municipal Codes)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent testified that the ARC should not have approved the driveway application because it demonstrated a clear violation of City of Surprise municipal codes on its face, specifically asserting the 10-foot extension caused the driveway to exceed 50 percent of the front lot line. The CC&Rs require structures to comply with municipal regulations.

Respondent’s Position: Ms. Salazar stated that the HOA places the responsibility on each homeowner to ensure their projects comply with all applicable municipal codes. The ARC does not independently verify compliance. The approval notice sent to the neighbor explicitly stated, “You also must follow all local building codes and setback requirements, if applicable.

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The petitioners failed to establish that the driveway qualified as a “structure” under the definition relevant to Section 8.02. Furthermore, the judge noted that even if it were considered a structure, the HOA did not have a duty or responsibility under this CC&R section to pre-emptively enforce municipal codes.

2.3. Allegation 3: Violation of CC&R Section 8.06 (Obstruction of Easements)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent testified that a fire hydrant located near the property line constituted a “public utility easement” and that the neighbor’s driveway extension was a structure placed upon it, interfering with its use in violation of the CC&Rs.

Respondent’s Position: Ms. Salazar testified she was not aware of any public utility easement associated with the fire hydrant.

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The petitioners failed on two points. First, they presented “no evidence to establish that the fire hydrant at issue constituted a public utility easement.” Second, even assuming it was an easement, they failed to prove the driveway obstructed it. This conclusion was decisively supported by Ms. Berent’s own testimony, in which she “acknowledged… that a residential fire occurred two houses away from her and the fire department had to use the fire hydrant… the fire hose was running across Neighbors’ driveway during that time.” This demonstrated the hydrant remained fully accessible and usable.

2.4. Allegation 4: Violation of A.R.S. § 33-1803(B) (Failure to Enforce)

Petitioner’s Claim: Ms. Berent argued that “common sense” required the HOA to enforce its CC&Rs and penalize the neighbors for the violations, drawing a comparison to the HOA sending her notices for weeds in her yard.

Respondent’s Position: The HOA argued that it chose not to pursue enforcement action against the neighbors because the City of Surprise, after issuing an initial Notice of Ordinance Violation, had itself “declined to pursue any further enforcement action.”

ALJ’s Conclusion: No violation found. The judge pointed to the “plain language” of the statute, which states the board of directors may impose penalties, establishing this as a discretionary power, not a mandatory duty. Nothing in the statute required the HOA to take enforcement action. The HOA’s decision not to act, mirroring the city’s own lack of follow-up, was a valid exercise of its authority.

3. Key Chronology of Events

July 7, 2015: The petitioners’ neighbors submit an “Application for Design Review” to install a 10-foot by 35-foot concrete driveway extension.

July 15, 2015: The HOA’s Architectural Review Committee (ARC) approves the application.

July 17, 2015: VISION Community Management sends an approval notice to the neighbors with conditions, including adherence to a 13-inch property line setback and all local building codes.

August 2015: The neighbors begin construction. The petitioners email the HOA board to complain about the project, questioning city approval and raising concerns about a nearby fire hydrant.

May 16, 2016: The City of Surprise issues a “Notice of Ordinance Violation” to the neighbors, stating a “driveway extension was added contrary to code requirements.”

Post-May 2016: The City of Surprise takes no further enforcement action against the neighbors.

April 26, 2018: The Berents file their HOA Dispute Petition.

August 15 & 22, 2018: The administrative hearing is held.

September 11, 2018: The ALJ issues the final decision, ordering that the petition be dismissed in its entirety.

March 8, 2022: The ALJ issues a “Minute Entry – Document Reject,” noting that the OAH has no jurisdiction and will not consider further documents submitted by the petitioners.

4. Post-Decision Developments

On March 8, 2022, nearly three and a half years after the case was closed, ALJ Tammy L. Eigenheer issued a “Minute Entry – Document Reject.” This entry states:

“It is unclear why the Office of Administrative Hearings was sent these documents as the decision in this matter was issued on September 11, 2018, and the Office of Administrative Hearings has had no jurisdiction in this matter since that time.”

The entry advises the petitioners that no documents sent after the decision would be considered and that “no further response will be provided from the Office of Administrative Hearings” for any future filings.

5. Quoted Provisions and Statutes

The case revolved around the interpretation of the following sections of the Bell West Ranch Homeowners Association CC&Rs and Arizona Revised Statutes.

CC&R Section 6.02 (Membership):

CC&R Section 8.02 (Restrictions Apply to All Structures):

CC&R Section 8.06 (No Obstruction of Easements):

A.R.S. § 33-1803(B):