az-commercial-disputes

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Subject-matter bundle for Arizona commercial / business-to-business civil litigation — contract disputes, trade secret, fraudulent transfer, LLC / corporate disputes, business torts, civil racketeering, arbitration. Triggers: "Arizona commercial litigation", "Arizona business dispute", "Maricopa Commercial Court", "Arizona contract breach", "Arizona attorney fees", "UCC Arizona", "Arizona LLC dispute", "Arizona RULLCA", "Arizona judicial dissolution", "Arizona derivative action", "Arizona trade secret", "Arizona fraudulent transfer", "tortious interference", "Arizona civil RICO", "Arizona fraud particularity", "Arizona arbitration". Covers Maricopa Commercial Court, UCC, LLC Act, Business Corporation Act, Arizona Uniform Trade Secrets Act, Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, contract-action attorney-fee statute (A.R.S. § 12-341.01), civil racketeering with treble damages, Rule 9(b) fraud pleading.

codearranger By codearranger schedule Updated 6/12/2026

name: az-commercial-disputes description: > Subject-matter bundle for Arizona commercial / business-to-business civil litigation — contract disputes, trade secret, fraudulent transfer, LLC / corporate disputes, business torts, civil racketeering, arbitration. Triggers: "Arizona commercial litigation", "Arizona business dispute", "Maricopa Commercial Court", "Arizona contract breach", "Arizona attorney fees", "UCC Arizona", "Arizona LLC dispute", "Arizona RULLCA", "Arizona judicial dissolution", "Arizona derivative action", "Arizona trade secret", "Arizona fraudulent transfer", "tortious interference", "Arizona civil RICO", "Arizona fraud particularity", "Arizona arbitration". Covers Maricopa Commercial Court, UCC, LLC Act, Business Corporation Act, Arizona Uniform Trade Secrets Act, Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, contract-action attorney-fee statute (A.R.S. § 12-341.01), civil racketeering with treble damages, Rule 9(b) fraud pleading. version: 0.1.8

Arizona Commercial Disputes

NOT LEGAL ADVICE. Generated content is a drafting aid. Arizona's contract-action attorney-fee statute (A.R.S. § 12-341.01) makes fee exposure a central strategic variable in almost every commercial matter, and several statutory remedies (trade-secret exemplary damages, civil-racketeering treble damages) carry precise multipliers and thresholds. Verify every statute number, dollar threshold, multiplier, and limitations count against the current Arizona Revised Statutes and Arizona reporters before relying.

Use this subject-matter bundle for Arizona commercial / business-to-business civil litigation — contract, trade secret, fraudulent transfer, intracorporate (corporate / LLC) disputes, business torts, fiduciary-duty claims, civil racketeering, and arbitration enforcement.

At a glance

  • Attorney fees drive strategy. A.R.S. § 12-341.01 gives the court discretion to award reasonable attorney fees to the successful party in any contested action arising out of a contract, express or implied. This is the single most important commercial-litigation lever in Arizona: it shapes settlement, Rule 68 offers, and pleading (frame claims to fall within or outside "arising out of contract"). Fees need not equal amounts actually paid but cannot exceed them.
  • The Maricopa County Commercial Court runs a specialized complex-commercial-case docket within Superior Court. Eligible business disputes can be assigned to commercial-court judges for active case management. See az-maricopa and az-superior-courts for venue mechanics and assignment criteria; general business matters outside the commercial docket proceed in ordinary Superior Court civil departments.
  • Fraud-with-particularity: Ariz. R. Civ. P. 9(b) requires that "the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake" be stated with particularity — Arizona's analog to Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).
  • Statutory civil racketeering: A.R.S. § 13-2314.04 gives a private claimant injured by a pattern of racketeering activity a civil action in Superior Court for up to treble damages plus costs and attorney fees — Arizona's civil-RICO overlay. Confirm the predicate-act, pattern, and limitations requirements in the corpus before pleading.

The Maricopa County Commercial Court

  • Maricopa County Superior Court operates a Commercial Court docket for complex commercial / business disputes, with designated judges and case-management protocols geared to multi-party, document-intensive litigation.
  • Assignment turns on eligibility criteria (subject matter, amount in controversy, complexity) set by local administrative order. Confirm current eligibility and the assignment / opt-in mechanics in the corpus and with az-maricopa before assuming commercial-court routing.
  • Business disputes that do not qualify, or that arise outside Maricopa County, proceed in the ordinary Superior Court civil departments — see az-superior-courts.

SOL catalog (the most-used)

Claim SOL Citation
Breach of written contract 6 years A.R.S. § 12-548
Breach of oral contract 3 years A.R.S. § 12-543
Sale of goods (UCC 2-725) 4 years (parties may shorten to ≥ 1 year, not extend) A.R.S. § 47-2725
Common-law fraud 3 years (from discovery) A.R.S. § 12-543
Tortious interference 2 years A.R.S. § 12-542
Conversion 2 years A.R.S. § 12-542
Trade-secret misappropriation (AUTSA) 3 years from discovery A.R.S. § 44-406
Fraudulent transfer (UFTA) actual fraud generally 4 years (or 1 year from discovery); constructive 4 years A.R.S. § 44-1009
Civil racketeering 3 years from discovery / 10 years from violation A.R.S. § 13-2314.04
Civil conspiracy follows the underlying tort

Confirm exact counts and any discovery-rule nuance in the corpus; do not rely on the table alone.

The principal Arizona statutes / doctrines

1. Arizona UCC — A.R.S. Title 47

Arizona has enacted the Uniform Commercial Code at A.R.S. Title 47.

  • Article 2 (Sales) — A.R.S. § 47-2101 et seq. Formation, warranties, performance, remedies. The 4-year statute of limitations is at A.R.S. § 47-2725; parties may reduce it to not less than one year but may not extend it.
  • Article 3 (Negotiable Instruments) — A.R.S. § 47-3101 et seq. Holder-in-due-course, enforcement of notes and drafts, and the instrument foundation for commercial collection.
  • Article 9 (Secured Transactions) — A.R.S. § 47-9101 et seq. Attachment, perfection (financing-statement filing with the Arizona Secretary of State), priority, and the default / disposition / commercial-reasonableness regime. Article 9 questions drive most commercial-collection and collateral-priority disputes.

See az-law-references/references/ucc-model/ for the model UCC and the corpus for Arizona's enacting sections.

2. Arizona Limited Liability Company Act — A.R.S. § 29-3101 et seq.

  • This is the current Act. The 2019 Arizona LLC Act (Arizona RULLCA), codified at A.R.S. § 29-3101 et seq. and fully effective September 1, 2020, replaced the prior LLC chapter at A.R.S. § 29-601 et seq. for all Arizona LLCs. Cite the § 29-3101 chapter for any current dispute; reach for the old § 29-601 chapter only for conduct predating the transition or where a savings clause applies.
  • Member / manager duties — fiduciary duties of loyalty and care under the Act; the operating agreement allocates management (member-managed vs. manager-managed) within the Act's non-waivable-duty floor.
  • Dissociation — voluntary withdrawal and the statutory events of dissociation under the Act and the operating agreement.
  • Judicial dissolution — on application of a member where it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the business in conformity with the certificate of organization / operating agreement, or on deadlock / oppression-type grounds. Dissolution is frequently a buy-out lever rather than an actual wind-up objective.
  • Derivative actions — member standing, demand, and the litigation framework under the Act.

3. Arizona Business Corporation Act — A.R.S. § 10-101 et seq.

  • Shareholder remedies — statutory remedies for shareholders, including relief in closely held corporations for oppressive / fraudulent / illegal conduct by those in control.
  • Derivative actions — standing, demand on the board, and the special-litigation-committee / dismissal framework.
  • Inspection rights — shareholder access to corporate books and records on proper purpose.
  • Judicial dissolution — deadlock, illegality / oppression / fraud / waste / misapplication of assets by those in control, with buy-out alternatives.
  • Fiduciary duties — director duty of care and loyalty; good-faith / business-judgment standard.

4. Arizona Uniform Trade Secrets Act (AUTSA) — A.R.S. § 44-401 et seq.

  • "Trade secret" and "misappropriation" defined (A.R.S. § 44-401): information deriving independent economic value from not being generally known or readily ascertainable and subject to reasonable secrecy efforts; misappropriation by improper acquisition or by unauthorized disclosure / use.
  • Injunctive relief (A.R.S. § 44-402): actual or threatened misappropriation may be enjoined.
  • Damages (A.R.S. § 44-403): actual loss plus unjust enrichment not captured by actual loss; or a reasonable royalty in the alternative. For willful and malicious misappropriation, the court may award exemplary damages up to twice the compensatory award.
  • Attorney fees (A.R.S. § 44-404): the court may award fees for a bad-faith misappropriation claim, a bad-faith motion to terminate an injunction, or willful and malicious misappropriation.
  • SOL (A.R.S. § 44-406): 3 years from discovery / reasonable discovery.

AUTSA claims commonly overlay noncompete enforcement (see az-employment) and fiduciary-duty / faithless-employee theories.

5. Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (UFTA) — A.R.S. § 44-1001 et seq.

Arizona enacted the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act at A.R.S. § 44-1001 et seq.

  • Actual fraud (A.R.S. § 44-1004): transfer made with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors; statutory "badges of fraud" inform intent.
  • Constructive fraud (A.R.S. §§ 44-1004 / 44-1005): transfer for less than reasonably equivalent value while insolvent or rendered insolvent.
  • Remedies (A.R.S. § 44-1007): avoidance of the transfer; attachment; injunction; appointment of a receiver; judgment against the transferee.
  • SOL (A.R.S. § 44-1009): see the corpus for the per-theory counts and the actual-fraud one-year-from-discovery extension.

UFTA is the primary tool for post-judgment commercial collection where a debtor has moved assets to insiders. See az-post-judgment for execution practice.

6. Business torts and statutory civil racketeering

  • Tortious interference — Arizona recognizes both interference with contract and interference with a business relationship or expectancy, the latter requiring improper means or motive. 2-year SOL (A.R.S. § 12-542).
  • Civil conspiracy — an agreement of two or more persons to accomplish an unlawful purpose (or a lawful purpose by unlawful means); not independently actionable — it requires an underlying tort, and the limitations period follows that tort.
  • Conversion — wrongful exercise of dominion over personal property inconsistent with the owner's rights. 2-year SOL (A.R.S. § 12-542).
  • Statutory civil racketeeringA.R.S. § 13-2314.04 gives a person injured in person, business, or property by a pattern of racketeering activity a civil action in Superior Court for recovery of up to treble damages, plus costs and attorney fees, and equitable relief (injunction, divestiture, constructive trust). Liability is proved by a preponderance standard. It requires a qualifying pattern of statutory predicate acts (fraud / schemes / theft offenses are common predicates in commercial matters); confirm the predicate list, the pattern / continuity requirement, and the 3-year-from-discovery / 10-year-from-violation limitations frame in the corpus before pleading. Note the jurisdictional requirement under A.R.S. § 13-2314.04(H) to serve notice and a copy of the pleading on the Attorney General within 30 days after filing.

7. Pleading fraud with particularity — Ariz. R. Civ. P. 9(b)

Ariz. R. Civ. P. 9(b): in allegations of fraud or mistake, the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake must be stated with particularity — Arizona's analog to Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). Plead the who, what, when, where, and how — the speaker, the false representation, its time and place, the fact misrepresented, and what was obtained or given up as a consequence. UFTA actual-fraud and civil-racketeering fraud predicates are commonly held to this particularity standard.

8. Revised Uniform Arbitration Act — A.R.S. § 12-3001 et seq.

Arizona enacted the Revised Uniform Arbitration Act (RUAA) at A.R.S. § 12-3001 et seq. (the definitions section is § 12-3001). It largely tracks — and where interstate commerce is involved is frequently preempted by — the Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.).

  • Validity / enforcement: written arbitration agreements are valid and enforceable except on generally applicable contract-formation grounds.
  • Motion to compel / stay: a court compels arbitration and stays litigation of arbitrable claims; separability of the arbitration clause follows Prima Paint-style analysis where the FAA applies, and delegation clauses can route gateway arbitrability questions to the arbitrator.
  • Vacatur: limited statutory grounds (corruption, fraud, evident partiality, exceeding powers, refusal to hear material evidence). "Manifest disregard" is not an FAA vacatur ground after Hall Street Associates v. Mattel, 552 U.S. 576 (2008).
  • Confirmation: judgment entered on a confirmed award.

Damages and remedies

Claim Compensatory Exemplary / treble Fees
Breach of contract Expectation / reliance / restitution Not available (contract-only) Discretionary to successful party (A.R.S. § 12-341.01)
Breach + fraud K + fraud damages Punitive on clear-and-convincing evil mind § 12-341.01 on the contract claim
AUTSA Actual loss + unjust enrichment; reasonable royalty fallback Up to 2x on willful & malicious (A.R.S. § 44-403) Bad-faith / willful (A.R.S. § 44-404)
Civil racketeering Actual damages Up to 3x (A.R.S. § 13-2314.04) Costs + attorney fees (A.R.S. § 13-2314.04)
Conversion Value at conversion Punitive on evil mind American Rule
UFTA Avoidance + judgment vs. transferee Case-specific
Tortious interference Lost profits + lost expectancy Punitive on evil mind American Rule
Shareholder / member oppression / dissolution Buy-out at fair value; damages Court discretion

Forum strategy

Claim Default forum Notes
Complex commercial / business dispute (Maricopa) Maricopa Commercial Court docket Assignment per local administrative order — confirm eligibility
Trade-secret / noncompete enforcement Superior Court Equity forum for TRO + injunction; verified pleading + sealing
LLC / corporate dissolution + derivative Superior Court SLC review for corporate derivative
Commercial contract / UFTA / conversion Superior Court Justice Court if amount ≤ $10,000
Civil racketeering Superior Court (A.R.S. § 13-2314.04 names Superior Court) Treble-damages + equitable-relief menu
Federal diversity (out-of-state defendant + $75k) U.S. District Court (D. Ariz.) Removal possible; Erie state substantive law
Arbitration motion to compel Superior Court FAA-preempted in interstate-commerce contracts

Drafting checklist

  • Run the A.R.S. § 12-341.01 fee analysis early — does the action "arise out of a contract"? Frame claims and Rule 68 offers with the discretionary fee award in view.
  • Confirm the 6-year written-contract SOL (A.R.S. § 12-548), the 3-year oral-contract SOL (A.R.S. § 12-543), or the 4-year UCC 2-725 clock (A.R.S. § 47-2725); for tort overlays use the 2-year A.R.S. § 12-542 clock.
  • Plead fraud with Ariz. R. Civ. P. 9(b) particularity — speaker, representation, time, place, what was obtained / given up.
  • For LLC disputes, cite the current 2019 Act / Arizona RULLCA at A.R.S. § 29-3101 et seq., not the repealed § 29-601 chapter (use the old chapter only for pre-transition conduct).
  • For trade-secret claims: identify the trade secret with enough specificity to plead without destroying secrecy; seek a protective order / sealing; pursue 2x exemplary damages + fees on willful & malicious facts (A.R.S. §§ 44-403 / 44-404).
  • For UFTA: plead badges of fraud with particularity (actual-fraud counts frequently held to the Rule 9(b) standard).
  • For civil racketeering: confirm the statutory predicate acts, the pattern / continuity requirement, and the limitations frame before pleading A.R.S. § 13-2314.04 treble damages.
  • For oppression / dissolution: weigh buy-out at fair value as a settlement lever vs. forced dissolution.
  • For derivative claims: comply with the demand and special-litigation-committee framework under the BCA.
  • For arbitration: identify FAA vs. Arizona RUAA governing law, separability of the clause, and any delegation provision before moving to compel under A.R.S. § 12-3001 et seq.

Composition

  • For statewide format and caption: az-statewide-format
  • For Superior Court / Maricopa Commercial Court venue mechanics: az-maricopa, az-superior-courts
  • For limited-jurisdiction commercial claims: az-justice-courts
  • For the first responsive pleading: az-first-30-days
  • For drafting motions / declarations / orders: az-draft-motion, az-draft-declaration, az-draft-order
  • For SOL / limitations arithmetic: az-deadlines
  • For discovery in a commercial matter: az-discovery
  • For noncompete / fiduciary-duty / AUTSA overlap with employment: az-employment
  • For post-judgment commercial collection (UFTA / execution): az-post-judgment

References

  • az-law-references — Arizona Revised Statutes, Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure, Arizona Rules of Evidence, federal-debt-laws + ucc-model symlinks
  • A.R.S. § 12-341.01 — discretionary attorney fees to the successful party in a contract action
  • A.R.S. Title 47 — Arizona UCC (Article 2 sales incl. the 4-year SOL at A.R.S. § 47-2725; Article 3 instruments; Article 9 secured transactions)
  • A.R.S. § 29-3101 et seq. — Arizona Limited Liability Company Act (2019 Act / Arizona RULLCA, fully effective 2020; replaces the former § 29-601 chapter)
  • A.R.S. § 10-101 et seq. — Arizona Business Corporation Act (shareholder remedies, derivative actions, dissolution)
  • A.R.S. § 44-401 et seq. — Arizona Uniform Trade Secrets Act (damages A.R.S. § 44-403; fees A.R.S. § 44-404; SOL A.R.S. § 44-406)
  • A.R.S. § 44-1001 et seq. — Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act
  • A.R.S. § 13-2314.04 — statutory civil racketeering (up to treble damages + costs + attorney fees)
  • Ariz. R. Civ. P. 9(b) — fraud-with-particularity pleading
  • A.R.S. § 12-3001 et seq. — Revised Uniform Arbitration Act
  • Hall Street Associates, L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., 552 U.S. 576 (2008) — FAA vacatur grounds (informs RUAA practice)
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