Jeremy R Whittaker v. The Val Vista Lake Community Association (ROOT)

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H045-REL; 25F-H054-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2025-08-08
Administrative Law Judge Adam D. Stone
Outcome total
Filing Fees Refunded $1,000.00
Civil Penalties $1,000.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Jeremy R. Whittaker Counsel
Respondent The Val Vista Lakes Community Association Counsel Joshua M. Bolen, Esq.

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1805
A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge granted both consolidated petitions (25F-H045-REL and 25F-H054-REL), finding that Respondent, The Val Vista Lakes Community Association, violated A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) by wrongfully withholding requested documents and failing to respond to records requests. Respondent was ordered to follow A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) for all pending and future requests, reimburse the Petitioner the total filing fees of $1000.00, and pay a total civil penalty of $1000.00.

Key Issues & Findings

Violation regarding failure to provide association records (Policies/Legal)

Petitioner alleged Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide requested records (including those regarding records policy and attorney fee information) within the ten-business-day deadline, and by conditioning production on an unenforceable ‘Records Request Form’. The tribunal found Val Vista wrongfully withheld the documents and violated the statute.

Orders: Petition granted. Respondent ordered to follow A.R.S. § 33-1805(A), reimburse the $500 filing fee, and pay a $500 civil penalty.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $500.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01

Violation regarding failure to provide financial records (Bank Statements)

Petitioner alleged Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) by failing to provide requested operating and reserve bank statements. Val Vista failed to respond to the request. The tribunal found the failure to respond unacceptable and in violation of the statute.

Orders: Petition granted. Respondent ordered to follow A.R.S. § 33-1805(A), reimburse the $500 filing fee, and pay a $500 civil penalty.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $500.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA Records Request, Failure to Produce Documents, Statutory Violation, Civil Penalty, Filing Fee Refund, Consolidated Cases
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02
  • Title 33, Chapter 16, Article 1

Decision Documents

25F-H045-REL Decision – 1315733.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1316066.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1316100.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1316101.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1318153.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1324339.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1324343.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1324372.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1328416.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1337742.pdf

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25F-H045-REL Decision – 1342973.pdf

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George Wolchko v. Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H025-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2025-05-05
Administrative Law Judge Samuel Fox
Outcome partial
Filing Fees Refunded $2,000.00
Civil Penalties $150.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner George Wolchko Counsel
Respondent Victoria Manor Management & Property Owners Association Counsel Christopher Duren

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1805
Bylaws, Article III, Section 4
CC&Rs, Section 4.04
Bylaws, Article IV, Section 1

Outcome Summary

The Petitioner prevailed on three of the four issues: Violation of AZ Law on Delivery of Community Documents (A.R.S. § 33-1805), Failure to Uphold CCRs Regarding Common Wall Repairs (Bylaws/CC&R violation), and operating with fewer than the minimum required number of board members (Bylaws violation). The Petitioner did not prevail on the issue regarding the Failure to Hold a Special HOA Meeting.

Why this result: Petitioner's request for an “emergency meeting” regarding the wall repair was deemed technically insufficient to qualify as a formal 'special meeting' petition under the Bylaws.

Key Issues & Findings

Violation of AZ Law on Delivery of Community Documents

The HOA failed to provide the Kachina Management contract within the required ten business days for examination or copies, despite numerous requests.

Orders: Respondent failed to comply with A.R.S. § 33-1805 by not making documents available for examination within ten business days of request.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $50.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • Bylaws, Article X
  • CC&Rs, Section 9.07

Failure to Hold a Special HOA Meeting

The HOA failed to hold a special meeting requested by a valid petition signed by 25% of members, concerning common wall damage.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)
  • Bylaws, Article III, Section 4

Failure to Uphold CCRs Regarding Common Wall Repairs

The HOA refused to repair a common wall designated as a Common Element after damage was caused by an HOA-sanctioned electrician, failing their maintenance obligation.

Orders: The Board failed to maintain a Common Element (electrical conduit/wall area) in good repair after its hired contractor caused damage, violating Bylaws and CC&R obligations.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $50.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • CC&Rs, Section 4.04
  • Bylaws, Article IV, Section 3
  • A.R.S. § 33-1803(A)

Violations of HOA Elections Procedures and Community Documents (Failure to seat required number of board members)

The HOA Board violated governing documents by operating with only two members, failing to maintain the minimum required number of three directors.

Orders: Respondent violated Bylaws Article IV, Section 1 by not maintaining a Board of Directors composed of no fewer than three persons.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $50.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • Bylaws, Article IV, Section 1
  • CC&Rs, Section 5.03

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA governance, Document request, Board composition, Common elements maintenance, Filing fee refund, Civil penalty
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • Bylaws, Article IV, Section 1
  • CC&Rs, Section 4.04
  • Bylaws, Article IV, Section 3
  • A.R.S. § 33-1804(A)

Decision Documents

25F-H025-REL Decision – 1268559.pdf

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25F-H025-REL Decision – 1276022.pdf

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25F-H025-REL Decision – 1276027.pdf

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25F-H025-REL Decision – 1282178.pdf

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25F-H025-REL Decision – 1288973.pdf

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25F-H025-REL Decision – 1290761.pdf

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25F-H025-REL Decision – 1301417.pdf

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Debbie Westerman v. Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 25F-H029-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2025-03-12
Administrative Law Judge Samuel Fox
Outcome loss
Filing Fees Refunded $500.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Debbie Westerman Counsel
Respondent Bridgewood Nine 30 Homeowners Association Counsel Mark Lines

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1258

Outcome Summary

The ALJ found that the documents Petitioner requested—specifically bills issued by Respondent’s counsel—were privileged communications under A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1). Because these documents were subject to the statutory exception, the Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof that the Respondent violated the records request statute. Respondent was deemed the prevailing party.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to establish a violation because the requested records fell under the attorney-client privilege exception defined in A.R.S. § 33-1258(B).

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violation of member's right to examine financial records regarding legal fees.

Petitioner sought statements from the HOA's law firm (Shaw and Lines) from 2015 onward, specifically seeking the numerical amounts paid in legal fees. The HOA failed to respond within ten business days. The HOA argued the requested bills were privileged communications and therefore exempt from disclosure under A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1).

Orders: Respondent was deemed the prevailing party in this matter.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: records request, HOA records, condominium act, privileged communication, attorney-client privilege, legal fees
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258(B)(1)

Decision Documents

25F-H029-REL Decision – 1282218.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:45:02 (95.6 KB)

Brian & Rosalie Gordon v. Tucson Estate No. Two Owner’s Association

Case Summary

Case ID 24F-H043-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2024-07-10
Administrative Law Judge Samuel Fox
Outcome partial
Filing Fees Refunded $2,000.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Brian Gordon and Rosalie Gordon Counsel
Respondent Tucson Estate No. Two Owner's Association Counsel Jason Smith

Alleged Violations

Bylaws Article 10; Finance Committee rules
A.R.S. § 33-1805; Bylaws Article 10
A.R.S. § 33-1805; Bylaws Article 10
A.R.S. § 33-1805; Bylaws Article 10

Outcome Summary

Petitioners were deemed the prevailing party regarding Petition Issues 1 and 4, and Respondent was deemed the prevailing party regarding Issues 2 and 3. Respondent was ordered to pay Petitioners $1,000.00 of the filing fee. Respondent was also directed to comply with Community Documents and A.R.S. § 33-1805 going forward. No Civil Penalty was levied.

Why this result: Petitioners failed to meet the burden of proof for Complaints 2 and 3, establishing that Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 or failed to abide by Community Documents, because Respondent provided all available records or offered additional reports.

Key Issues & Findings

Violation of Community Documents by not recording and making available the minutes of all Finance Committee Meetings held in 2023.

Petitioners requested minutes for five 2023 Finance Committee Meetings. The Committee rules required minutes of its meetings as a permanent record of its actions. The Respondent failed to record meeting minutes as required.

Orders: Respondent directed to comply with the requirements of its Community Documents going forward.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 10-11601
  • Bylaws Article 10

Violation by not keeping and making financial and other HOA business documentation (Budget Working Papers) available for review.

Petitioners requested copies of Budget Working Papers. Respondent provided all available documents (unapproved budget, general ledger, and draft), maintaining only one version of a proprietary spreadsheet. Petitioners failed to meet their burden to prove Respondent did not make records available.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 10-11601
  • Bylaws Article 10

Violation by not keeping and making financial and other HOA business documentation (Accounts Payable journal with GL detail) available for review.

Petitioners requested Accounts Payable journal/reports multiple times. Respondent provided copies of available accounts payable reports (check receipts and general ledger). When Respondent later identified an additional detailed report available for purchase, Petitioners refused it.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 10-11601
  • Bylaws Article 10

Violation by not keeping and making financial and other HOA business documentation (IRS Tax filings and backup documentation) available for review.

Petitioners requested IRS Tax filings. Respondent initially provided only photocopies of two pages of the 1120-h form, missing schedules and backup documentation. Respondent failed to provide full tax returns or backup documentation in a timely manner (within ten business days).

Orders: Respondent is directed to comply with the requirements of A.R.S. § 33-1805 going forward.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 10-11601
  • Bylaws Article 10

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA records dispute, Finance Committee minutes, budget working papers, accounts payable journal, IRS tax filings, record retention, A.R.S. § 33-1805 violation
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 10-11601
  • Bylaws Article 10
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199.02

Decision Documents

24F-H043-REL Decision – 1176916.pdf

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24F-H043-REL Decision – 1198119.pdf

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24F-H043-REL Decision – 1200350.pdf

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Katherine Belinsky v. Del Cerro Condos

Case Summary

Case ID 22F-H2222046-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2022-07-14
Administrative Law Judge Adam D. Stone
Outcome loss
Filing Fees Refunded $500.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Katherine Belinsky Counsel
Respondent Del Cerro Condos Counsel

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge denied the petition, concluding that Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805(A), finding that the HOA and its property managers had made records reasonably available for examination.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof required by A.A.C. R2-19-119. The evidence showed Respondent responded timely to requests, provided some documents, and offered Petitioner appointments to review other sensitive or older records in the office, which she failed to schedule.

Key Issues & Findings

Failure to provide books, records and accounts

Petitioner alleged Respondent failed to provide required HOA records, including bank statements, invoices, and contracts, following requests made primarily in March 2022, thereby violating statute A.R.S. § 33-1805(A).

Orders: Petitioner's petition denied.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA Records Access, Statutory Violation, Burden of Proof, Special Assessment Dispute
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119
  • State ex rel. Thomas v. Contes, 216 Ariz. 525, 527, 169 P.3d 115, 117 (App. 2007)
  • Marsoner v. Pima County, 166 Ariz. 486, 488, 803 P.2d 897, 899 (1991)

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

22F-H2222046-REL Decision – 971256.pdf

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22F-H2222046-REL Decision – 983785.pdf

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Aaron J Gragg v. Anthem Parkside at Merrill Ranch Community

Case Summary

Case ID 21F-H2121042-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2021-11-01
Administrative Law Judge Sondra J. Vanella
Outcome none
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Aaron J. Gragg Counsel
Respondent Anthem Parkside at Merrill Ranch Community Association, Inc. Counsel Curtis Ekmark, Esq.

Alleged Violations

CC&R Article 12.4(a)
A.R.S. § 33-1803
A.R.S. § 33-1805
CC&R 2.4(a)

Outcome Summary

The Petitioner's Petition, alleging four separate violations of Arizona statutes and CC&Rs (regarding ADR procedures, fraudulent violation assessment, failure to produce documents, and selective enforcement), was denied as the Petitioner failed to prove any of the alleged violations by a preponderance of the evidence.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to meet the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1803, A.R.S. § 33-1805, or CC&R sections 2.4(a) and 12.4(a).

Key Issues & Findings

Refusal to participate in Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR)

Petitioner alleged Respondent failed to comply with CC&R Article 12.4(a) regarding ADR. The ALJ found that CC&R Article 12.4(a) excluded proceedings initiated by the Association to enforce architectural, design, and landscape controls from mandatory arbitration.

Orders: Petitioner’s Petition is denied

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • CC&Rs Section 12.4(a)

Fraudulent assessment of violations

Petitioner alleged Respondent assessed violations without observation. Evidence showed Petitioner’s landscape violations were observed during routine inspections by the Community Standards Administrator.

Orders: Petitioner’s Petition is denied

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1803

Failure to produce documents

Petitioner requested documents establishing design review requirements and enforcement authority. The ALJ found Petitioner’s requests were actually legal questions posed to Respondent regarding the CC&Rs, not requests for specific documents or records.

Orders: Petitioner’s Petition is denied

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805

Selective Enforcement / Similar Treatment

Petitioner alleged selective enforcement because he was required to provide a photograph to prove compliance. The ALJ found Respondent has required photographic verification from other similarly situated non-compliant homeowners since 2010.

Orders: Petitioner’s Petition is denied

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • CC&R Section 2.4(a)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA enforcement, Landscaping violation, Alternative Dispute Resolution, Selective Enforcement, Document Request
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1803
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199 et seq.
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119
  • CC&Rs Section 12.4(a)
  • CC&R Section 2.4(a)

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

21F-H2121042-REL Decision – 921903.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:36:57 (123.1 KB)

Jeffrey D Points v. Olive 66 Condominium Association

Case Summary

Case ID 21F-H2121059-REL
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2021-09-08
Administrative Law Judge Tammy L. Eigenheer
Outcome partial
Filing Fees Refunded $1,000.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Jeffrey D Points Counsel
Respondent Olive 66 Condominium Association Counsel MacKenzie Hill

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1258
A.R.S. § 33-1248

Outcome Summary

The Petitioner’s petition was affirmed in part (violation of A.R.S. § 33-1258 regarding documents) and denied in part (no violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248 regarding open meetings). Respondent was ordered to reimburse $500.00 of the filing fee and comply with A.R.S. § 33-1258.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to prove the violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248 because evidence of improper notice was lacking and the topic discussed in executive session was likely covered by a statutory exemption.

Key Issues & Findings

Access to Association Records

Respondent violated A.R.S. § 33-1258 by failing to provide certain requested 2021 invoices that were in existence at the time of the request within the statutory 10-day period.

Orders: Respondent must comply with A.R.S. § 33-1258 going forward. Petitioner reimbursed $500.00 filing fee.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805

Open Board Meetings

Petitioner failed to establish a violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248 regarding the March 25, 2021, board meeting, as the issue regarding notice was not established and the topic discussed (Landscaping Bid Review) likely fell under a statutory exemption.

Orders: Petitioner failed to establish the alleged violation of A.R.S. § 33-1248.

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: petitioner_loss

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1248
  • A.R.S. § 33-1804

Analytics Highlights

Topics: condominium association, document request, open meeting, executive session, invoices, filing fee refund
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1248
  • A.R.S. § 33-1258
  • A.R.S. § 33-1804
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199 et seq.
  • A.A.C. R2-19-119

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

21F-H2121059-REL Decision – 909631.pdf

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21F-H2121059-REL Decision – 909633.pdf

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Joan A. Tober, vs. Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2020-01-15
Administrative Law Judge Kay Abramsohn
Outcome loss
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Joan A. Tober Counsel
Respondent Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association Counsel Diana J. Elston, Esq.

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the HOA acted in compliance with A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) and (B) and was the prevailing party on rehearing. The HOA was not required to provide the privileged attorney letter, and Petitioner failed to clarify her vague request for other documents.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to sustain her burden of proof. The primary requested document was privileged, and the overall request was unreasonably broad and left unclarified, preventing the HOA from reasonably making records available.

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violation of HOA member access to records statute regarding timeliness of disclosure.

Petitioner sought a copy of a privileged attorney letter discussed at a Board meeting and "any and all documentation" regarding the North Ridge wall. The issue on rehearing was whether the HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide records within 10 business days. The ALJ found no violation, concluding the letter was privileged communication and the broader request was unreasonably broad and unclarified by the Petitioner.

Orders: The HOA is the prevailing party with regard to the rehearing, and Petitioner’s appeal is dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1)
  • A.R.S. § 41-2198.01
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(B)
  • 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. § 12-904(A)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA records request, Attorney-Client Privilege, Statutory violation (A.R.S. 33-1805), Timeliness, Rehearing
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1)
  • A.R.S. § 41-2198.01
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(B)
  • 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. § 12-904(A)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

19F-H1918042-REL-RHG Decision – 764197.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-09T03:34:01 (187.4 KB)





Briefing Doc – 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG


Briefing: Case No. 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG, Tober v. Civano 1 HOA

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decision in Case No. 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG, involving Petitioner Joan A. Tober and Respondent Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association (HOA). The dispute centered on the HOA’s alleged failure to provide records in accordance with Arizona statute A.R.S. § 33-1805.

The core conflict originated from the Petitioner’s request for a specific attorney’s letter (“the Letter”) concerning the North Ridge wall, which was mentioned at an HOA Board meeting. The Petitioner argued that by discussing the Letter, the HOA waived attorney-client privilege. The HOA maintained the Letter was privileged and rightfully withheld. The Petitioner subsequently expanded her request to “any and all documentation” regarding the wall, which the HOA found to be overly broad.

Following an initial hearing on June 5, 2019, the ALJ ruled in favor of the HOA, finding the Letter was privileged and the HOA had complied with the statute. A rehearing was granted to address the Petitioner’s claim that the ruling “did not address the timeliness aspect of the law.”

The final decision, issued after the December 11, 2019 rehearing, reaffirmed the HOA as the prevailing party. The ALJ concluded that the HOA did not violate the 10-business-day requirement of A.R.S. § 33-1805. The ruling determined that the Petitioner’s expanded request was “unreasonably broad,” and her failure to respond to the HOA’s request for clarification prevented the HOA from being able to reasonably provide records. The Petitioner’s appeal was ultimately dismissed.

——————————————————————————–

Case Overview

Case Number: 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG

Tribunal: In the Office of Administrative Hearings, Arizona

Petitioner: Joan A. Tober (Appeared on her own behalf)

Respondent: Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association (Represented by Diana J. Elston, Esq.)

Administrative Law Judge: Kay Abramsohn

Subject Matter: A petition filed with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging an HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide association records upon request.

Chronology of Key Events

Nov 20, 2018

At an HOA Board meeting, the President mentions a letter from the HOA’s attorney regarding the North Ridge wall, its erosion, and the HOA’s legal responsibility. He suggests he “can … send it out.”

Nov 26, 2018

Petitioner makes her first request for a copy of the attorney’s letter.

Nov 27, 2018

Petitioner makes a second request. The HOA responds that it is waiting for clarification from its attorney.

Nov 29, 2018

Petitioner submits a third, expanded request for “any and all documentation… and all background information” regarding the North Ridge wall.

Nov 29, 2018

The HOA responds that the President had misspoken, the letter is a privileged “Legal Opinion,” and asks if Petitioner needs a copy of the “original engineer report” for clarification. The ALJ found no evidence Petitioner responded to this clarification request.

Dec 26, 2018

Petitioner files her official Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate.

Jan 15-16, 2019

The HOA forwards “historical erosion reports” (2013 and 2014) and an invoice to Petitioner, who acknowledges already possessing the reports.

June 5, 2019

The first administrative hearing is held.

July 29, 2019

The initial ALJ Decision is issued, finding in favor of the HOA.

Aug 5, 2019

Petitioner files a request for rehearing, citing the “timeliness aspect of the law.”

Aug 23, 2019

The Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate grants the rehearing.

Dec 11, 2019

The rehearing is conducted.

Jan 15, 2020

The final ALJ Decision is issued, again ordering that the HOA is the prevailing party and dismissing the Petitioner’s appeal.

Petitioner’s Position and Arguments

Joan A. Tober, a homeowner since 2001, past Board member, and active observer who taped and transcribed HOA meetings since 2008, built her case on several key arguments:

Waiver of Privilege: The Petitioner’s central initial argument was that the HOA had “intentionally waived confidentiality” of the attorney’s letter. She contended that because the HOA President mentioned the Letter in an open meeting and other Board members did not object, this demonstrated “unanimous consent to waive confidentiality.”

Right to Information: The Petitioner’s requests were framed as a right to access information impacting her dues and the HOA budget. Her first request noted, “Since it was discussed at the Board meeting and impacts my dues in addition to being an integral part of the budget decision I see no reason why I should have to pay for a copy.”

Expanded Request for Full Background: After her initial requests for the Letter were met with a delay, the Petitioner broadened her demand significantly:

Allegation of Incomplete Disclosure: The Petitioner argued that even after filing her petition, the HOA’s response was insufficient. She asserted that “the Association only sent two reports that were already readily available and in my possession.” She believed that given the long-standing nature of the erosion issue (since 2013), “there’s more than just two pieces of documentation in the possession of the Association.”

Focus on Timeliness for Rehearing: The basis for the rehearing request was the specific claim that the original ALJ ruling “did not address the timeliness aspect of the law,” alleging the HOA failed to provide access to records within the 10-business-day period mandated by A.R.S. § 33-1805.

Respondent’s Position and Arguments

The Civano 1 HOA, represented by legal counsel, countered the Petitioner’s claims with the following arguments:

Assertion of Attorney-Client Privilege: The HOA’s primary defense was that the Letter constituted “privileged communication between an attorney for the association and the association,” which is explicitly protected from disclosure to members under A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1).

No Waiver of Privilege: The HOA contended that the “mere mention” of the Letter by the Board President at a meeting did not constitute a legal waiver of its privileged status. The President was found to have “misspoken” when he suggested copies could be provided.

Overly Broad and Vague Request: The HOA argued that the Petitioner’s expanded request for “any and all” documents was too broad and vague to allow for a reasonable response. The HOA was not required to guess what records were being requested.

Attempt at Clarification: The HOA provided evidence that it attempted to clarify the vague request on November 29, 2018, by asking if the Petitioner needed a copy of the “original engineer report.” The ALJ found no evidence that the Petitioner ever responded to this query.

Substantial Compliance: The HOA indicated that by reviewing the exhibits the Petitioner herself presented, it was clear that she had already received copies of the requested historical documents (the 2013 and 2014 reports).

Administrative Law Judge’s Findings and Conclusions

After two hearings, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) made determinative findings of fact and law that led to the dismissal of the Petitioner’s case.

Key Findings of Fact

• The Petition was filed solely because the Petitioner wanted a copy of the attorney’s letter discussed at the November 20, 2018 meeting.

• At that meeting, the only document referenced regarding the North Ridge wall was the attorney’s letter/report. No other background documents were mentioned.

• The Petitioner already possessed copies of the 2013 and 2014 engineering reports (which she had obtained from the city) at the time she made her expanded request.

• The Petitioner’s expanded request of November 29, 2018, was the first time she asked for more than just the Letter.

• The Petitioner failed to provide evidence that she responded to the HOA’s November 29, 2018 email seeking to clarify her request.

• The record contains no evidence of any erosion reports other than the 2013 and 2014 reports, nor any evidence of remediation work having been performed by the HOA related to the erosion issue.

Conclusions of Law

1. The Letter is Privileged: Under A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1), the attorney’s letter is a privileged communication. Therefore, the “HOA was not required to provide access to, or a copy of, the Letter to Petitioner or to any member within any time period.”

2. The Request Was Unreasonably Broad: The ALJ concluded that the Petitioner’s third request, for “the letter … and all background information,” was “unreasonably broad and remained unclarified by Petitioner.”

3. Petitioner’s Failure to Clarify Precluded HOA Action: The Petitioner’s failure to respond to the HOA’s request for clarification “prevent[ed] the HOA from being able to reasonably make records available.” The ruling states, “An association is not required to guess what records are being requested.”

4. No Violation of Statute: Based on these findings, the ALJ concluded that the HOA did not violate the 10-business-day provision of A.R.S. § 33-1805(A). The Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof. The final decision clarifies that the HOA “acted in compliance with A.R.S. § 33-1805.”

Final Order

IT IS ORDERED that the HOA is the prevailing party with regard to the rehearing, and Petitioner’s appeal is dismissed.

The order, issued on January 15, 2020, is binding on the parties. Any further appeal must be filed with the superior court within thirty-five days.


Joan A. Tober, vs. Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2020-01-15
Administrative Law Judge Kay Abramsohn
Outcome loss
Filing Fees Refunded $0.00
Civil Penalties $0.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Joan A. Tober Counsel
Respondent Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association Counsel Diana J. Elston, Esq.

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the HOA acted in compliance with A.R.S. § 33-1805(A) and (B) and was the prevailing party on rehearing. The HOA was not required to provide the privileged attorney letter, and Petitioner failed to clarify her vague request for other documents.

Why this result: Petitioner failed to sustain her burden of proof. The primary requested document was privileged, and the overall request was unreasonably broad and left unclarified, preventing the HOA from reasonably making records available.

Key Issues & Findings

Alleged violation of HOA member access to records statute regarding timeliness of disclosure.

Petitioner sought a copy of a privileged attorney letter discussed at a Board meeting and "any and all documentation" regarding the North Ridge wall. The issue on rehearing was whether the HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide records within 10 business days. The ALJ found no violation, concluding the letter was privileged communication and the broader request was unreasonably broad and unclarified by the Petitioner.

Orders: The HOA is the prevailing party with regard to the rehearing, and Petitioner’s appeal is dismissed.

Filing fee: $0.00, Fee refunded: No

Disposition: respondent_win

Cited:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1)
  • A.R.S. § 41-2198.01
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(B)
  • 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. § 12-904(A)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: HOA records request, Attorney-Client Privilege, Statutory violation (A.R.S. 33-1805), Timeliness, Rehearing
Additional Citations:

  • A.R.S. § 33-1805
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(A)
  • A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1)
  • A.R.S. § 41-2198.01
  • A.R.S. § 32-2199.02(B)
  • 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. § 12-904(A)
  • A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H)

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

19F-H1918042-REL-RHG Decision – 764197.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:08:41 (187.4 KB)





Briefing Doc – 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG


Briefing: Case No. 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG, Tober v. Civano 1 HOA

Executive Summary

This document provides a comprehensive analysis of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decision in Case No. 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG, involving Petitioner Joan A. Tober and Respondent Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association (HOA). The dispute centered on the HOA’s alleged failure to provide records in accordance with Arizona statute A.R.S. § 33-1805.

The core conflict originated from the Petitioner’s request for a specific attorney’s letter (“the Letter”) concerning the North Ridge wall, which was mentioned at an HOA Board meeting. The Petitioner argued that by discussing the Letter, the HOA waived attorney-client privilege. The HOA maintained the Letter was privileged and rightfully withheld. The Petitioner subsequently expanded her request to “any and all documentation” regarding the wall, which the HOA found to be overly broad.

Following an initial hearing on June 5, 2019, the ALJ ruled in favor of the HOA, finding the Letter was privileged and the HOA had complied with the statute. A rehearing was granted to address the Petitioner’s claim that the ruling “did not address the timeliness aspect of the law.”

The final decision, issued after the December 11, 2019 rehearing, reaffirmed the HOA as the prevailing party. The ALJ concluded that the HOA did not violate the 10-business-day requirement of A.R.S. § 33-1805. The ruling determined that the Petitioner’s expanded request was “unreasonably broad,” and her failure to respond to the HOA’s request for clarification prevented the HOA from being able to reasonably provide records. The Petitioner’s appeal was ultimately dismissed.

——————————————————————————–

Case Overview

Case Number: 19F-H1918042-REL-RHG

Tribunal: In the Office of Administrative Hearings, Arizona

Petitioner: Joan A. Tober (Appeared on her own behalf)

Respondent: Civano 1 Neighborhood 1 Homeowners Association (Represented by Diana J. Elston, Esq.)

Administrative Law Judge: Kay Abramsohn

Subject Matter: A petition filed with the Arizona Department of Real Estate alleging an HOA violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to provide association records upon request.

Chronology of Key Events

Nov 20, 2018

At an HOA Board meeting, the President mentions a letter from the HOA’s attorney regarding the North Ridge wall, its erosion, and the HOA’s legal responsibility. He suggests he “can … send it out.”

Nov 26, 2018

Petitioner makes her first request for a copy of the attorney’s letter.

Nov 27, 2018

Petitioner makes a second request. The HOA responds that it is waiting for clarification from its attorney.

Nov 29, 2018

Petitioner submits a third, expanded request for “any and all documentation… and all background information” regarding the North Ridge wall.

Nov 29, 2018

The HOA responds that the President had misspoken, the letter is a privileged “Legal Opinion,” and asks if Petitioner needs a copy of the “original engineer report” for clarification. The ALJ found no evidence Petitioner responded to this clarification request.

Dec 26, 2018

Petitioner files her official Petition with the Arizona Department of Real Estate.

Jan 15-16, 2019

The HOA forwards “historical erosion reports” (2013 and 2014) and an invoice to Petitioner, who acknowledges already possessing the reports.

June 5, 2019

The first administrative hearing is held.

July 29, 2019

The initial ALJ Decision is issued, finding in favor of the HOA.

Aug 5, 2019

Petitioner files a request for rehearing, citing the “timeliness aspect of the law.”

Aug 23, 2019

The Commissioner of the Arizona Department of Real Estate grants the rehearing.

Dec 11, 2019

The rehearing is conducted.

Jan 15, 2020

The final ALJ Decision is issued, again ordering that the HOA is the prevailing party and dismissing the Petitioner’s appeal.

Petitioner’s Position and Arguments

Joan A. Tober, a homeowner since 2001, past Board member, and active observer who taped and transcribed HOA meetings since 2008, built her case on several key arguments:

Waiver of Privilege: The Petitioner’s central initial argument was that the HOA had “intentionally waived confidentiality” of the attorney’s letter. She contended that because the HOA President mentioned the Letter in an open meeting and other Board members did not object, this demonstrated “unanimous consent to waive confidentiality.”

Right to Information: The Petitioner’s requests were framed as a right to access information impacting her dues and the HOA budget. Her first request noted, “Since it was discussed at the Board meeting and impacts my dues in addition to being an integral part of the budget decision I see no reason why I should have to pay for a copy.”

Expanded Request for Full Background: After her initial requests for the Letter were met with a delay, the Petitioner broadened her demand significantly:

Allegation of Incomplete Disclosure: The Petitioner argued that even after filing her petition, the HOA’s response was insufficient. She asserted that “the Association only sent two reports that were already readily available and in my possession.” She believed that given the long-standing nature of the erosion issue (since 2013), “there’s more than just two pieces of documentation in the possession of the Association.”

Focus on Timeliness for Rehearing: The basis for the rehearing request was the specific claim that the original ALJ ruling “did not address the timeliness aspect of the law,” alleging the HOA failed to provide access to records within the 10-business-day period mandated by A.R.S. § 33-1805.

Respondent’s Position and Arguments

The Civano 1 HOA, represented by legal counsel, countered the Petitioner’s claims with the following arguments:

Assertion of Attorney-Client Privilege: The HOA’s primary defense was that the Letter constituted “privileged communication between an attorney for the association and the association,” which is explicitly protected from disclosure to members under A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1).

No Waiver of Privilege: The HOA contended that the “mere mention” of the Letter by the Board President at a meeting did not constitute a legal waiver of its privileged status. The President was found to have “misspoken” when he suggested copies could be provided.

Overly Broad and Vague Request: The HOA argued that the Petitioner’s expanded request for “any and all” documents was too broad and vague to allow for a reasonable response. The HOA was not required to guess what records were being requested.

Attempt at Clarification: The HOA provided evidence that it attempted to clarify the vague request on November 29, 2018, by asking if the Petitioner needed a copy of the “original engineer report.” The ALJ found no evidence that the Petitioner ever responded to this query.

Substantial Compliance: The HOA indicated that by reviewing the exhibits the Petitioner herself presented, it was clear that she had already received copies of the requested historical documents (the 2013 and 2014 reports).

Administrative Law Judge’s Findings and Conclusions

After two hearings, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) made determinative findings of fact and law that led to the dismissal of the Petitioner’s case.

Key Findings of Fact

• The Petition was filed solely because the Petitioner wanted a copy of the attorney’s letter discussed at the November 20, 2018 meeting.

• At that meeting, the only document referenced regarding the North Ridge wall was the attorney’s letter/report. No other background documents were mentioned.

• The Petitioner already possessed copies of the 2013 and 2014 engineering reports (which she had obtained from the city) at the time she made her expanded request.

• The Petitioner’s expanded request of November 29, 2018, was the first time she asked for more than just the Letter.

• The Petitioner failed to provide evidence that she responded to the HOA’s November 29, 2018 email seeking to clarify her request.

• The record contains no evidence of any erosion reports other than the 2013 and 2014 reports, nor any evidence of remediation work having been performed by the HOA related to the erosion issue.

Conclusions of Law

1. The Letter is Privileged: Under A.R.S. § 33-1805(B)(1), the attorney’s letter is a privileged communication. Therefore, the “HOA was not required to provide access to, or a copy of, the Letter to Petitioner or to any member within any time period.”

2. The Request Was Unreasonably Broad: The ALJ concluded that the Petitioner’s third request, for “the letter … and all background information,” was “unreasonably broad and remained unclarified by Petitioner.”

3. Petitioner’s Failure to Clarify Precluded HOA Action: The Petitioner’s failure to respond to the HOA’s request for clarification “prevent[ed] the HOA from being able to reasonably make records available.” The ruling states, “An association is not required to guess what records are being requested.”

4. No Violation of Statute: Based on these findings, the ALJ concluded that the HOA did not violate the 10-business-day provision of A.R.S. § 33-1805(A). The Petitioner failed to meet her burden of proof. The final decision clarifies that the HOA “acted in compliance with A.R.S. § 33-1805.”

Final Order

IT IS ORDERED that the HOA is the prevailing party with regard to the rehearing, and Petitioner’s appeal is dismissed.

The order, issued on January 15, 2020, is binding on the parties. Any further appeal must be filed with the superior court within thirty-five days.


Tom Barrs v. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association

Case Summary

Case ID 19F-H1918037-REL-RHG
Agency ADRE
Tribunal OAH
Decision Date 2019-09-12
Administrative Law Judge Jenna Clark
Outcome full
Filing Fees Refunded $500.00
Civil Penalties $500.00

Parties & Counsel

Petitioner Tom Barrs Counsel Jonathan A. Dessaules
Respondent Desert Ranch Homeowners Association Counsel B. Austin Baillio

Alleged Violations

A.R.S. § 33-1805

Outcome Summary

The Administrative Law Judge concluded that the HOA violated ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805 by failing to provide the full requested documentation relating to EDC actions and communications. The Petitioner's request for relief was granted, resulting in the reimbursement of the $500 filing fee and the imposition of a $500 civil penalty against the HOA.

Key Issues & Findings

Whether Desert Ranch Homeowners Association (Respondent) violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to fulfill a records request.

The Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to fully comply with Petitioner's specific request for EDC records (submissions, requests, and approvals) by providing only a summary table instead of the totality of requested communications within the statutory deadline.

Orders: Petitioner's petition granted. Respondent ordered to reimburse Petitioner's $500.00 filing fee (ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01) and tender a $500.00 civil penalty to the Department (ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)).

Filing fee: $500.00, Fee refunded: Yes, Civil penalty: $500.00

Disposition: petitioner_win

Cited:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)

Analytics Highlights

Topics: Records Request, HOA Violation, Civil Penalty, Filing Fee Reimbursement
Additional Citations:

  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02(A)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2102
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.05
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199(2)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.01(D)
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 32-2199.02
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 41-1092
  • ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-119
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 1-243
  • ARIZ. ADMIN. CODE R2-19-107
  • ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1804

Audio Overview

Decision Documents

19F-H1918037-REL-RHG Decision – 737525.pdf

Uploaded 2025-10-08T07:08:32 (176.7 KB)





Briefing Doc – 19F-H1918037-REL-RHG


Briefing Document: Barrs v. Desert Ranch Homeowners Association

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes the findings from two Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Decisions concerning a records request dispute between homeowner Tom Barrs (Petitioner) and the Desert Ranch Homeowners Association (Respondent). The central issue was whether the Association violated Arizona Revised Statute (A.R.S.) § 33-1805 by failing to adequately fulfill a records request submitted by the Petitioner on November 1, 2018.

The initial hearing on March 21, 2019, resulted in an April 10, 2019, decision in favor of the Association. The ALJ concluded that the Petitioner had failed to properly submit his request to all members of the Association’s Board, and thus the Association’s partial response (a summary table) did not constitute a statutory violation.

Following a successful appeal by the Petitioner, a rehearing was held on August 27, 2019. New evidence demonstrated that the Petitioner had followed prior express instructions from the Association regarding who to contact for records requests. Consequently, the ALJ issued a new decision on September 12, 2019, reversing the original order. The final ruling found the Association in violation of A.R.S. § 33-1805. The Association was ordered to reimburse the Petitioner’s $500 filing fee and was assessed a civil penalty of $500.

Case Overview

Case Numbers

No. 19F-H1918037-REL (Initial Decision)
No. 19F-H1918037-REL-RHG (Rehearing Decision)

Petitioner

Tom Barrs, a property owner and member of the Association.

Respondent

Desert Ranch Homeowners Association, Scottsdale, Arizona.

Central Issue

Whether the Association violated A.R.S. § 33-1805 by failing to fulfill a records request for Environmental Design Committee (EDC) actions, requests, and approvals.

Initial Petition

Filed by Tom Barrs on December 17, 2018.

Initial Hearing

March 21, 2019, before ALJ Jenna Clark.

Rehearing

August 27, 2019, before ALJ Jenna Clark.

Final Outcome

Petition granted in favor of Tom Barrs. The Association was found in violation of state law, ordered to reimburse the filing fee, and fined.

Key Individuals and Entities

Role / Affiliation

Tom Barrs

Petitioner; homeowner in the Desert Ranch subdivision.

Desert Ranch HOA

Respondent; homeowners’ association.

Jenna Clark

Administrative Law Judge, Office of Administrative Hearings.

Brian Schoeffler

Chairman of the Association’s Environmental Design Committee (EDC); appeared on behalf of the Association.

Catherine Overby

President of the Association’s Board of Directors.

Lori Loch-Lee

Vice President of Client Services at Associated Asset Management (AAM), the Association’s accounting/management company.

Jonathan Dessaules, Esq.

Attorney who appeared on behalf of the Petitioner at the rehearing.

The Records Request and Subsequent Dispute

The Initial Request

On November 1, 2018, at 9:40 p.m., Petitioner submitted an electronic records request to Catherine Overby, Brian Schoeffler, and Lori Loch-Lee. The text of the request was as follows:

“Pursuant to ARS 33-1805, I am requesting a copy of all EDC actions, written requests, and written approvals from October 2017 through October 2018. Soft copies via return email are preferable; otherwise, please let me know when hard copies are available for pickup.”

The Association’s Response and Petitioner’s Follow-Up

November 2, 2018: Lori Loch-Lee from AAM notified the Petitioner she would forward his request to all Board members, noting that AAM was only the Association’s accounting firm.

November 18, 2018: The Petitioner received a summary table listing some EDC actions, not the complete set of communications and documents requested. At this time, he was advised by Brian Schoeffler that he “needed to copy all Board members on records requests.”

March 6, 2019: The Petitioner sent a follow-up email, accusing the Association of willful failure and clarifying the specific records he sought beyond the summary table, including “copies of the communications (letters, emails, and application forms) relating to Environmental Design Review (EDC) submissions, requests, complaints and approvals (or denials).”

March 11, 2019: Mr. Schoeffler replied, arguing that the request had been complied with on November 18, 2018, and directed the Petitioner to “submit a new request” for the additional information.

March 17, 2019: Mr. Schoeffler reiterated that the original request was only sent to two of four Board members and stated that providing additional documents could be “interpreted as an admission of guilt.”

As of the rehearing date (August 27, 2019), the Petitioner had still not received all the documentation requested on November 1, 2018.

Legal Proceedings and Rulings

Initial Hearing and Decision (April 10, 2019)

In the first hearing, the dispute centered on the validity of the request submission and the adequacy of the Association’s response.

Arguments:

Petitioner (Barrs): Argued the Association acted in bad faith and willfully failed to fulfill the request, noting a similar dispute had been previously adjudicated. He was concerned with the completeness of the response, not its timeliness.

Respondent (HOA): Argued it had complied with the request by providing a summary table, consistent with its handling of a previous dispute with the Petitioner. Mr. Schoeffler testified that the response was untimely (provided on the 11th business day) but asserted it was otherwise sufficient.

ALJ Conclusion: The Judge ruled in favor of the Association, denying the Petitioner’s petition. The key finding was that the Petitioner had failed to properly submit his request.

“Because the credible evidence of record reflects that Petitioner failed to properly submit his records request to the Board, Petitioner has failed established by a preponderance of the evidence that the Association was in violation of ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805 for providing him with a summary table on November 18, 2018.”

The decision also noted that the statute does not legally obligate an HOA to email copies of records.

Rehearing and Final Decision (September 12, 2019)

After the Petitioner’s appeal was granted, a rehearing introduced new evidence that fundamentally changed the outcome.

New Evidence and Concessions:

July 19, 2017 Instruction: Evidence showed Association President Catherine Overby had previously appointed Brian Schoeffler as the Petitioner’s “primary records request contact.”

July 18, 2018 Instruction: Evidence showed Ms. Overby had also instructed the Petitioner to direct requests to the management company, AAM.

Association Concessions: The Respondent conceded that its governing documents do not require all Board members to be copied on records requests and that its own bylaws regarding submission forms are not adhered to or enforced.

ALJ’s Reversed Conclusion: The Judge reversed the prior decision and granted the Petitioner’s petition. The new evidence proved the Petitioner had followed express instructions from the Association.

“Petitioner’s November 01, 2018, records request was not required to be sent to all members of the Association’s Board, as Petitioner had expressly been instructed to only send his records requests to the Association’s EDC Chairman, Mr. Schoeffler, which he did.”

The Judge concluded that the partial response was a clear violation of the law.

“Petitioner is correct that the Association did not fully comply with his specific request, and has established by a preponderance of the evidence that the summary table provided by the Association was a violation of ARIZ. REV. STAT. § 33-1805.”

Final Order and Penalties

The Administrative Law Judge’s Final Order on September 12, 2019, which is binding on the parties, mandated the following:

1. Petition Granted: The Petitioner’s petition was granted.

2. Filing Fee Reimbursement: The Respondent (Desert Ranch HOA) was ordered to reimburse the Petitioner’s $500.00 filing fee.

3. Civil Penalty: The Respondent was ordered to pay a civil penalty of $500.00 to the Arizona Department of Real Estate.