Title 10 - Corporations and Associations

Chapter 31, Directors and Officers - Nonprofit Corporations, Sec. 10-3801-10-3864

Call and notice of meetings

Article 2, Meetings and Action of the Board, § 10-3822

Source: Arizona Revised Statutes

  1. Unless the articles of incorporation, bylaws or subsection C of this section provide otherwise, regular meetings of the board of directors may be held without notice of the date, time, place or purpose of the meeting.
  2. Unless the articles of incorporation, bylaws or subsection C of this section provide otherwise, special meetings of the board of directors shall be preceded by at least two days’ notice of the date, time and place of the meeting. The notice need not describe the purpose of the special meeting unless required by the articles of incorporation or bylaws.
  3. In corporations without members any board action to remove a director or to approve a matter that would require approval by the members if the corporation had members is not valid unless each director is given at least two days’ written notice that the matter will be voted on at a directors’ meeting or unless notice is waived pursuant to section 10-3823.
  4. Unless the articles of incorporation or bylaws provide otherwise, the presiding officer of the board of directors, the president or twenty per cent of the directors then in office may call and give notice of a meeting of the board.

Source: This content is sourced from the online version of the Arizona Revised Statutes located at www.azleg.gov.

Disclaimer: These statutes are provided as a courtesy by CHDB Law LLP. CHDB Law cannot guarantee that the statutes set forth on the website or in our published guide will not be found to be defective by a court or other tribunal after the date the books or online material are published. The HOA Knowledge Base does not attempt to include every statute that could apply to a community association issue. There may be other statutes or applicable laws that have a bearing on a particular legal issue confronted by a community association. These statutes are provided as a reference only. If a particular legal issue is confronted by a community association, the association should seek legal advice from competent attorneys.

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