Judges: Bill McCollum, Attorney General
Filed Date: 5/14/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Johnson:
As Property Appraiser for Seminole County, Florida, you have asked for my opinion on substantially the following questions:
1. Whether a golf course that is located within a platted residential subdivision can be taxed or assessed as a "common element" pursuant to section
2. To qualify as a "common element" for purposes of section
In sum:
1. So long as the golf course, located within a platted subdivision and designated on the plat, approved site plan or otherwise as a "common element for the exclusive benefit of lot owners," is not included within the lots that constitute inventory for the developer which inventory is intended to be privately owned or is currently privately owned, such property would appear to qualify as a "common element" for proration of taxes pursuant to section
2. In order to qualify as a "common element" for purposes of section
As background to your request for an opinion, you have advised this office that there are a number of residential subdivisions within Seminole County that contain a golf course. In some of these, the golf course continues to be owned and controlled by the developer (or a successor developer) of the subdivision and the developer has the right to assess the lot owners for the maintenance of the golf course. In other subdivisions, ownership of the golf course has been transferred to a homeowners' association or other community association along with the right to assess the lot owners for the maintenance of the golf course. In most instances, the governing documents for these subdivisions do not require that the golf course be considered or treated as a "common area" or a "common element." In some instances, the governing documents provide that the purchase of a lot within the subdivision does not confer upon the lot owner any right to the continued operation of the golf course or the right to use the golf course. Nonetheless, in most instances, the golf courses in these subdivisions have been designated on the plat or approved site plan as a common element for the exclusive benefit of lot owners within the subdivision.
Question One
Section
"(1) Ad valorem taxes and non-ad valorem assessments shall be assessed against the lots within a platted residential subdivision and not upon the subdivision property as a whole. An ad valorem tax or non-ad valorem assessment, including a tax or assessment imposed by a county, municipality, special district, or water management district, may not be assessed separately against common elements utilized exclusively for the benefit of lot owners within the subdivision, regardless of ownership. The value of each parcel of land that is or has been part of a platted subdivision and that is designated on the plat or the approved site plan as a common element for the exclusive benefit of lot owners shall, regardless of ownership, be prorated by the property appraiser and included in the assessment of all the lots within the subdivision which constitute inventory for the developer and are intended to be conveyed or have been conveyed into private ownership for the exclusive benefit of lot owners within the subdivision.
(2) As used in this section, the term "common element" includes:
(a) Subdivision property not included within lots constituting inventory for the developer which are intended to be conveyed or have been conveyed into private ownership.
(b) An easement through the subdivision property, not including the property described in paragraph (a), which has been dedicated to the public or retained for the benefit of the subdivision.
(c) Any other part of the subdivision which has been designated on the plat or is required to be designated on the site plan as a drainage pond, or detention or retention pond, for the exclusive benefit of the subdivision."
Therefore, pursuant to section
As this office noted in Attorney General Opinion 2003-63, the statute defines a "common element" as subdivision property not included in the inventory of lots intended to be sold or that have been sold to private owners, easements that have been dedicated to the public or retained for the benefit of the subdivision, and any other part of the subdivision designated on the plat or the site plan as a drainage pond, or detention or retention pond, for the exclusive use of the subdivision. In plain terms the statute includes as a common element any subdivision property not already sold or that is intended to be sold into private ownership, that is designated on the plat or plan as a common element.
Therefore, a golf course, regardless of ownership, would come within the scope of section
"1. is designated on a plat or approved site plan as a common element for the exclusive benefit of lot owners; and
2. is subdivision property but is not included within the lots that constitute inventory for the developer which inventory is intended to be or is privately owned."
Your letter advises that the subject property is located within a platted residential subdivision, is owned or controlled by the developer or a successor developer of the subdivision, and is designated on a plat or approved site plan or otherwise as a "common element for the exclusive benefit of lot owners."
Applying the statutory criteria to your description, it is my opinion that, so long as the golf course is not included within the lots that constitute inventory for the developer which inventory is intended to be privately owned or is currently privately owned, such golf course property would appear to qualify as a "common element" for proration of taxes pursuant to section
Question Two
Your second question relates to several previously issued Attorney General Opinions and asks whether the property must actually be used exclusively by the lot owners of the subdivision or whether the designation of the property as a "common element for the exclusive benefit of lot owners" is sufficient to claim the entitlement to prorated taxes or assessments.
Section
In Attorney General Opinion 2003-63, this office addressed whether a common element includes any property in a subdivision plat or site plan intended to benefit lot owners that is not a lot either sold into private ownership or held by the developer as inventory for sale, regardless of the ownership of such property. Citing the plain language of section
Subsequently, in Attorney General Opinion 2004-31, this office considered whether a golf course for which a user fee is charged (regardless of whether the users are property owners within a subdivision) could be classified as a common element under section
It continues to be the opinion of this office that, before a golf course may be assessed on a prorated basis and that assessment imposed on all of the individual lot owners within a subdivision, it must be shown that it is used exclusively for the benefit of the lot owners within the subdivision. That is, in order to qualify as a "common element" for purposes of section
In sum, it is my opinion that to qualify as a "common element" for purposes of section
Sincerely,
Bill McCollum
Attorney General
BM/tgh