In Arizona’s Thompson v. Albertson,[1] the Arizona Supreme Court ruling in Kalway[2] was put to the test and challenged by CAI in its amicus brief. Kalway held that
“The general-amendment-power provision and general-purpose statement were not sufficient to provide notice of future amendments. We interpret such restrictions to reflect the reasonable expectations of the affected homeowners. We hold that a general-amendment-power provision may be used to amend only those restrictions for which the HOA’s original declaration has provided sufficient notice.”
The appellate Court addressed CAI’s 42-page amicus brief, which the court does not usually perform but special attention was warranted. In short, CAI sought the appellate court to modify the AZ Supreme Court’s ruling that the case was a memorandum and not mandatory precedent. And as such, it did not consider its decision as mandatory precedent. Therefore, the ruling applied only to the case at hand.

Not the first time CAI attempted to influence the Court. In 2011 CAI AZ had tried 3 times to have the court’s decision that OAH adjudication of HOA disputes was unconstitutional. I had filed as pro se amicus that was accepted and resulted, as I firmly believe, resulted in changing the appellate court decision as an opinion to a memorandum without precedent standing.
“The [AZ Supreme] Court in addition to its regular fashion of terse announcements, DENIED or ACCEPTED, added an order under its powers to do so, AZ Supreme Court Rule 111(g), that the Gelb decision was not to be published. Not being published means that it is not binding authority, or precedent. It seems then that the door is open and res judicata – already decided – doesn’t apply.”[3]
[In Thompson] Discussion, Section IV. The Amicus Curiae Brief
“¶31 Community Associations Institute (‘CAI’) filed an amicus curiae brief requesting ‘clarification’ and possible ‘limitation’ of Kalway. Whether Kalway should be clarified or limited is a question for our supreme court. . . . (‘The lower courts are bound by our decisions, and this Court alone is responsible for modifying that precedent.’). We therefore decline CAI’s invitation to reach beyond the specific facts of this case to provide ‘direction and guidance.’”
Simply said, the appellate court rejected CAI’s attempt to overrule the AZ Supreme Court.
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Thompson v. Albertson, No. CA-CV 23-0082 (Ariz. App. Div 10 10-24-2023
AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF OF COMMUNITY ASSOCIATIONS INSTITUTE (CAI) (FILED WITH THE WRITTEN CONSENT OF THE PARTIES)
Mark Lines – #020553
SHAW & LINES, LLC
Counsel for Community Associations Institute
First, CAI continues to misrepresent itself and claim it’s “serving more than 74 million homeowners . . . CAI is representing not only itself, but also its tens of thousands of members on this important issue.” CAI fails to inform the Court of that the homeowner “volunteers” constitute an estimated 32% of its membership and have an estimated meager 14% representation in its governing board of trustees.[4]
CAI membership, at most, consists of a miniscule .05% (.00048).
Of the 33,000 CAI members, a minority of some 10,800 are ‘volunteers’ and not attorneys or managers.
‘Volunteers’ (CAVL) represent a miniscule .016% (.00016) of HOA members.
Second, the CAI argument. The AZ Supreme Court decision in Kalway[5] made reference to the vague term, “reasonable expectations” when considering the validity of HOA amendments. (The supreme court realized that the common procedural covenant that any amendment passed by the necessary vote was valid regardless of its impact on the members).
What the original declarant might have intended, and what owners first reasonably expected of the eventual use and improvement of those lots must be considered in the context of time, and reasonableness should be measured by the collective voice, exercising their contractual right to lawfully amend their covenants.
“Indeed, a “covenant can be amended to refine it, correct an error, fill in a gap, or change it in a particular way.” Kalway, . . . That’s the power and right of the owners collectively, through a majority vote, if the dictates of time demand it.”
CAI had argued against the reasonable expectations test as being too vague when all was clear and precise in the existing amendment procedures. The Court rejected the amicus brief because CAI had the audacity and the arrogance to ask the appellate court to overrule a supreme court decision. Unreal!
There cannot be change without change
As long as advocates remain silent and fail to criticize CAI’s misrepresentations —
“candor to the tribunal” ethical code violations — before the court, the legislature, and the media CAI will remain the voice of HOA-Land.
“To succeed you must accept the world as it is and rise above it.”
[1] Thompson v. Albertson, No. CA-CV 23-0082 (Ariz. App. Div 1) 10-24-2023.
[2] Kalway v. Calabria Ranch HOA, LLC, 252 Ariz. 532.
[3] (See AZ Supreme Court denied hearing the Gelb Petition to restore ALJ adjudication of HOA disputes).
[4] See “Why CAI is the Evil Empire.
[5] Supra n. 2.


