Title 42 - Taxation

Chapter 13, Valuation of Locally Assessed Property , Sec. 42-13002-42-13605

Deed restriction on common area use

Article 9, Common Areas, § 42-13404

Source: Arizona Revised Statutes

  1. As a condition for valuation under this article, the subdivider of a residential subdivision, on approval of the subdivision by the state real estate department pursuant to title 32, chapter 20, article 4, or the community or homeowners’ association that owns the common area shall record a deed restriction with the county recorder and file a copy of the restriction with the county assessor restricting the property to use as a common area.
  2. If the property is converted to a different use in violation of the restrictions, the assessor shall change the classification and revalue the property according to standard appraisal methods and techniques.
  3. The county assessor may consolidate parcel combinations within the same taxing district if requested by the community or homeowners’ association. A community or homeowners’ association may provide a one-time list of common area tracts by parcel number to the assessor, in a form prescribed by the department of revenue.
  4. The county assessor shall automatically consolidate parcel combinations within the same taxing district.  If after further review by the assessor the parcel does not meet the requirements of a common area as described in section 42-13402, the assessor may revoke the statutory valuation made pursuant to section 42-13403 and shall value the parcel according to standard appraisal techniques.  The revocation does not waive a community or homeowners’ association’s right to request the common area valuation.

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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