Arizona 2025 2025 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1726 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/24/2025

                      	SB 1726 
Initials NM 	Page 1 	Judiciary 
 
ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Fifty-seventh Legislature 
First Regular Session 
Senate: JUDE DP 4-2-1-0 | 3
rd
 Read 17-9-0-4 
 
SB 1726: unlawful occupants; property; removal; documents 
Sponsor: Senator Rogers, LD 7 
Committee on Judiciary 
Overview 
Allows property owners to request expedited removal of unlawful occupants from residential 
properties upon meeting specific criteria.  
History 
A person who is not named on the written lease of a property and who remains on said 
premises without the permission of the tenant or the landlord is not a lawful tenant. A person 
who knowingly remains on the premises without the permission of the tenant or the landlord 
may be removed by a law enforcement officer at the request of the tenant or the landlord who 
is entitled to possession of the premises (A.R.S. § 33-1378). 
The criminal code includes multiple forms of criminal trespass offenses, some of which may 
involve residential property. For example, a person can commit criminal trespass in the third 
degree, a class 3 misdemeanor, by knowingly entering or remaining unlawfully on any real 
property after a reasonable request to leave by a law enforcement officer, the owner or any 
other person having lawful control over such property, or reasonable notice prohibiting entry 
(A.R.S. § 13-1502). Additionally, one form of criminal trespass in the first degree involves a 
person who knowingly enters or remains unlawfully in a residential structure; this is a class 
1 misdemeanor (A.R.S. § 13-1504).  
Provisions 
1. Authorizes a property owner of a residential property to request that a law enforcement 
agency of that jurisdiction expeditiously remove a person who is unlawfully occupying the 
residential dwelling if all nine of the following apply: 
a) the requesting person is the owner or his agent;  
b) the property is residential in use; 
c) the unauthorized person is unlawfully occupying the property; 
d) the owner has directed the unauthorized person to leave; 
e) the property was not open to the public when the unauthorized person entered; 
f) the unauthorized person is not a current or former tenant; 
g) there was no prior cohabitation agreement; 
h) the unauthorized person is not an immediate family member of the owner; and 
i) there is no ongoing litigation between the owner and the unauthorized person. (Sec. 
2) 
2. Instructs the person entitled to possession of the residential property to submit an 
affidavit of complaint to the law enforcement agency of that jurisdiction to request the 
☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes) ☐ Fiscal Note    	SB 1726 
Initials NM 	Page 2 	Judiciary 
expeditious removal of the unauthorized person; the affidavit must affirm under oath that 
all nine statutory conditions are met. (Sec. 2) 
3. Directs law enforcement to conduct a preliminary investigation upon receipt of the 
affidavit, which may include reviewing alleged lease agreements, interviewing neighbors 
and other relevant inquiries. (Sec. 2) 
4. Requires law enforcement to serve a notice to vacate and restore possession to the owner 
if probable cause exists that the nine statutory conditions are met. (Sec. 2) 
5. Allows property owners to presume abandonment of personal belongings left by the 
occupant after the occupant has vacated the dwelling. (Sec. 2) 
6. Grants law enforcement officers and agencies immunity from liability for wrongful 
removal actions absent a showing of bad faith. (Sec. 2) 
7. Asserts that the statute does not limit other property rights or enforcement mechanisms 
and does not create new rights for unauthorized occupants. (Sec. 2) 
8. Classifies unlawful occupation involving intentional property damage as: 
a) a class 1 misdemeanor if damages are under $1,000; and  
b) a class 6 felony if damages are $1,000 or more. (Sec. 2) 
9. Classifies knowingly listing for sale or rent a residential property, without legal title or 
other authority, as a class 6 felony. (Sec. 2) 
10. Adds explicitly that the criminal penalty for recording fraudulent real estate documents 
applies to a document that purports to convey an ownership or leasehold interest in real 
property. (Sec. 1)  
11. Contains an intent clause. (Sec. 3)  
12. Makes technical changes. (Sec. 1)