Title 33 - Property

Chapter 9, Condominiums, Sec. 33-1201-33-1270

Other liens affecting the condominium

Article 3, Management of the Condominium, § 33-1257

Source: Arizona Revised Statutes

  1. Except as provided in subsection B of this section, a legally recorded judgment for money against the association is not a lien on the common elements but is a lien in favor of the judgment lienholder against all of the units in the condominium at the time the judgment was entered.  Other property of a unit owner is not subject to the claims of creditors of the association.
  2. If the association has granted a mortgage, deed of trust or security interest in the common elements to a creditor of the association pursuant to section 33-1252, the holder of that security interest must exercise its right against the common elements before its judgment lien on any unit may be enforced.
  3. Whether perfected before or after the creation of the condominium, if a lien other than a deed of trust or mortgage becomes effective against two or more units, the unit owner of an affected unit may pay to the lienholder the amount of the lien attributable to his unit, and the lienholder, on receipt of payment, shall promptly deliver a release of the lien covering that unit. The amount of the payment shall be proportionate to the ratio which that unit owner’s common expense liability bears to the common expense liabilities of all unit owners whose units are subject to the lien. After payment, the association shall not assess or have a lien against that unit owner’s unit for any portion of the common expenses incurred in connection with that lien.
  4. A judgment against the association shall be indexed in the name of the condominium and the association and shall include the legal description of the unit subject to the lien. When so indexed, the judgment is notice of the lien against the units.

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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