Title 10 - Corporations and Associations

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

Court ordered indemnification

Article 5, Indemnification, § 10-3854

Source: Arizona Revised Statutes

Unless a corporation’s articles of incorporation provide otherwise, a director of the corporation who is a party to a proceeding may apply for indemnification or an advance for expenses to the court conducting the proceeding or to another court of competent jurisdiction. On receipt of an application, the court after giving any notice the court considers necessary may order indemnification advances for expenses if it determines either:

  1. The director is entitled to mandatory indemnification under section 10-3852, in which case the court shall also order the corporation to pay the director’s reasonable expenses incurred to obtain court ordered indemnification.
  2. The director is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnification in view of all the relevant circumstances, whether or not the director met the standard of conduct set forth in section 10-3851 or was adjudged liable as described in section 10-3851, subsection D, but if the director was adjudged liable under section 10-3851, subsection D, indemnification is limited to reasonable expenses incurred.

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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