In the fall of 2024, the Arizona Department of Child Safety (DCS) mailed letters to parents who once had an open dependency and/or severance case.
Did you receive a letter? Visit the DCS letter page for more information.
A.R.S. means Arizona Revised Statutes and RPEA means Rules of Procedure for Eviction Actions.
These claims may be brought against your landlord in a separate action or as counterclaims in the eviction action.
Content provided can also be found at AZCourts.gov/eviction.
1. COUNTERCLAIMS
- Counterclaims in an eviction action must be filed in writing and served upon the opposing party. RPEA 8(a) The tenant can hand it to the landlord or attorney before the case is called by the judge.
- Counterclaims must state specific facts claiming that the landlord violated the rental agreement or statute.
- Counterclaims must state when and how any required notices were sent to the landlord and what the notices were about.
2. RETALIATION
If, in the past 6 months, the tenant complained to the landlord or a government agency charged with code enforcement about habitability issues materially affecting health and safety, and then the landlord did any of the following, the tenant may be entitled to damages. A.R.S. § 33-1381.
- Landlord increased rent
- Landlord decreased services
- Landlord filed an action for possession (eviction action)
- Landlord threatened to bring an action for possession
Damages are the same as those found in A.R.S. § 33-1367.
3. OUSTER
If the landlord unlawfully locks the tenant out of the rental unit or intentionally stops providing electric, gas, water, or other essential services, the tenant can do the following: A.R.S. § 33-1367
- Recover possession of the rental unit
- Terminate the rental agreement (landlord must return the security deposit as required by the law)
- Sue or counterclaim for an amount not more than 2 month’s rent or twice the actual financial harm suffered, whichever is greater.
4. ABUSE OF ACCESS
If the landlord does one of the following: A.R.S. § 33-1376(B)
- Enters the rental unit unlawfully (usually this means not providing proper notice of his or her intent to enter the rental unit);
- Enters lawfully in an unreasonable manner; or
- Makes repeated demands for entry that unreasonably harass the tenant.
The tenant can do one of the following:
- Obtain injunctive relief (get the court to order the landlord to stop); or
- Terminate the rental agreement.
In addition to the above, the tenant can also sue for actual damages not less than an amount equal to one month’s rent.
5. DIMINUTION OF FAIR RENTAL VALUE
- If the landlord deliberately or negligently fails to provide running water, gas or electrical service, reasonable amount of hot water, heat, air conditioning or cooling (where units are installed), or essential services, the tenant can ask the court for a return of part of the rent the tenant paid. In other words, because the landlord failed to supply one or more of the above, the rental unit was not worth what the tenant was paying for. A.R.S. § 33-1364(A)(2).
- This statute requires that the tenant first give the landlord reasonable notice about the problem.
6. NONCOMPLIANCE WITH RENTAL AGREEMENT BY LANDLORD
This statute allows for damages against the landlord, but requires previous written notice (either a 10-day notice for material noncompliance with the rental agreement or a 5-day notice for noncompliance materially affecting health and safety) to the landlord and an opportunity for the landlord to fix the problems stated in the notice. A.R.S. § 33-1361.