Ha, Ha. I bow to you, OP. That's the Order that has now become a Rule. Ironically, your original question got short-shrift and you probably know more about the underlying subject than most who commented on the TCPA. A member’s status is just a number in my opinion; everybody starts at 1. I post in threads that I feel warrant more input and most are far from unique, but I had recent involvement with the TCPA in the context of a spam-fax case (with one anonymous agent, hundreds of anonymous principals and hundreds of throw-away “800” opt-out numbers). It was an expensive headache seeking remedies beyond the jurisdiction of any Small Claims court. And if Arizona’s is still $2,500, and you were determined to proceed, I felt you should be sure of winning or the time and expense would not be worth it. As it is, if you don’t have to do discovery and can establish a prima facie case within the limited confines of Small Claims, I still wonder if proving a single violation with respect to you will feel justified. You’ll probably still get a settlement offer, if the dealership thinks it may be culpable, or you’ll have a judgment that you’ll have to collect, while the dealership turns to “Plan B”. There was a recent TCPA judgment for $30M; this won’t be it. I don’t believe in litigating for principle (principal and interest ok). I’m wondering if that certified letter to the top officer won’t get you satisfaction (and a full tune-up) that’s better than the sharp stick in the eye you get from an uninformed court.
BTW, as you prepare, you can find useful data on the EPIC (Electronic Information Privacy Center) site - http://epic.org/privacy/telemarketing - where one link takes you to the Arizona Telephone Solicitation Statute.
As to your original question, you’ll need to determine the legal composition of the company:
The web site of your Secretary of State will tell you if it’s a corporation or an LLC. If either, it will also give you the name and address of the registered agent for service of process. It will also give you information on limited partnerships.
A corporation’s president may also be the registered agent. For an LLC, you can also serve the General Manager and, again, he/she may be the same person. If you’ve tried unsuccessfully to serve that person, you can then serve the PIC (Person In Charge and authorized to accept service of process).
If the business is a sole proprietorship “doing business as” “XYZ Auto”, see who registered the fictitious name for the county.
Service can apparently be made by registered or certified mail and there is apparently some difference between counties. Here is a starting point for forms: http://www.azcourts.gov/PublicServices/CivilLaw/EvictionsSmallClaims.aspx
Notwithstanding that you can serve by mail, I think a private process server is more dramatic and likely to get a pre-trial response.
Good luck,