Subject summary
K. Whitaker (DOB 19xx · last known address Phoenix, AZ). Owner of one Maricopa County residence with claimed homestead and two passive LLC interests in single-asset real-estate holding companies. No bankruptcy filings.
Recovery posture is mixed. Arizona's homestead exemption (A.R.S. §33-1101) covers $400,000 of equity in the residence, which exceeds the property's estimated equity. The two passive LLCs each hold a single residential rental whose net equity, after senior mortgage liens, is modest.
Judgment details
- Cause number
- CV2023-006182
- Court of record
- Maricopa County Superior Court, AZ
- Judgment amount
- $78,500.00 principal + costs
- Date entered
- 2023-09-22
- Statute of limitations
- Current — 5-year period under A.R.S. §12-1551 (renewable; one renewal already filed 2024-01).
Real property findings
| Parcel | Address | County | Est. value | Exemptions | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 175-46-238B | 4112 N 38th St, Phoenix, AZ 85018 | Maricopa | $485,000 | Homestead claimed (A.R.S. §33-1101 — $400K) | mcassessor.maricopa.gov |
Vehicles & UCC liens
| Item | Detail | Lien status | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 Subaru Outback | VIN ending 8821 · titled 2018-05 | No active UCC | azdot.gov |
Business interests
| Entity | Role | Status | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camelback Holdings 12, LLC | Member (50%) | Active — single-asset residential rental | ecorp.azcc.gov |
| Phoenix Rental Group, LLC | Member (33%) | Active — single-asset residential rental | ecorp.azcc.gov |
Bankruptcy & litigation history
- 2017-08-21Camelback Holdings 12 formedAZ Corp Comm — single-asset residential LLC
- 2023-09-22Subject judgment enteredCause No. CV2023-006182 · $78,500 principal + costs
- 2024-01-15Judgment renewedAffidavit of renewal of judgment filed under A.R.S. §12-1551
- 2026-04-10No bankruptcy filings (PACER)Last 10 years checked, no active stay
Recoverable value analysis
This section translates the public-record findings above into a dollar view: what the judgment is worth today, which assets are realistically reachable, and whether the exposed value covers the claim. Figures are estimated exposed asset value, not guaranteed collection.
- Judgment principal
- $78,500
- Post-judgment interest (indicative, since 2023)
- + $11,800
- Recording & anticipated execution costs
- + $1,400
Exposed value covers roughly a third to two-thirds of the claim — a debtor exam is the swing factor.
The residence is fully shielded by Arizona's generous homestead. Recovery hinges on whether the two rental LLCs are distributing — which public records don't show.
- ~$18,000Camelback Holdings 12, LLC — 50% interestPartialMinority interest in a single-asset rental LLC; charging order reaches distributions.
- ~$12,000Phoenix Rental Group, LLC — 33% interestPartialMinority stake; forced distributions are difficult absent a debtor exam.
- ExemptPrimary residence (38th St)ExemptAZ homestead — A.R.S. §33-1101 ($400K) exceeds the residence's equity.
- Exempt2018 Subaru OutbackExemptWithin Arizona's motor-vehicle exemption.
Recovery score rationale
Score: 54 / 100 — Medium confidence. The score reflects two competing facts: the residence has positive equity but is fully covered by the AZ homestead exemption, and the two passive LLC interests have measurable commercial value but are minority stakes in single-asset entities where forced distributions are difficult.
Arizona's homestead exemption is one of the most generous in the U.S. ($400K of equity). After deducting the senior mortgage and the homestead exemption from the assessed value, the residual exposed equity is approximately $35K — less than half of the judgment principal.
Confidence is rated Medium because the LLC distribution history is not visible in public records. The estimated recovery range assumes no current distributions; if distributions are running, recovery is materially higher.
Enforcement path & indicative timeline
- Step 1Weeks 1–3Application for charging order on both LLC interestsPositions the firm to intercept any distributions from the single-asset rentals.
- Step 2Weeks 3–6Judgment debtor exam — highest-leverage step hereSurfaces distribution history and bank relationships that aren't in public records.
- Step 3OngoingConditional writ tied to any sale of the residenceIf the homestead is sold, exposed equity above the exemption becomes reachable.
Windows are illustrative sequencing, not commitments or legal advice. Actual timing depends on court calendars and your firm's strategy.
Recommended next step
Firms in this asset profile typically file an Application for Charging Order against the two LLC interests and a writ of execution conditioned on the homestead exemption being defeated (e.g. if the property is sold). Pursuing the residence directly is generally not productive.
A judgment debtor exam is often the highest-leverage next step here — it surfaces distribution history that is not in public records.
Writrun does not provide legal advice. Your firm makes all decisions about strategy, timing, and filings.
Sources appendix
- [1]https://mcassessor.maricopa.gov/2026-04-10T09:10Z
- [2]https://ecorp.azcc.gov/2026-04-10T09:11Z
- [3]https://ecorp.azcc.gov/2026-04-10T09:12Z
- [4]https://azdot.gov/motor-vehicles2026-04-10T09:14Z
- [5]https://pacer.uscourts.gov/2026-04-10T09:16Z
- [6]https://superiorcourt.maricopa.gov/2026-04-10T09:18Z