Judges: Bill McCollum, Attorney General
Filed Date: 7/29/2010
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Knox:
On behalf of the Board of County Commissioners of Brevard County, you have asked for my opinion on substantially the following question:
Do the provisions of Part I, Chapter
In sum:
The Local Government Code Enforcement Boards Act does not preempt or otherwise operate to prevent Brevard County from adopting an ordinance defining a "violator" to include the owners of real property upon which a code violation may exist when the violation may have been caused by tenants residing on those properties.
You have asked whether the provisions of the "Local Government Code Enforcement Boards Act,"1 represent a preemption to the state of the matters addressed therein and the discussion herein is limited to this issue.
Part I, Chapter
A previously issued opinion of this office, Attorney General Opinion 81-62, considered the converse of your question, that is, whether the jurisdiction of a local government code enforcement board was limited to reviewing only a property owner's alleged violation of the city code to the exclusion of a nonproperty owner's alleged violation.
As discussed in that opinion, resolution of the question is dependent on a review of the wording of the particular ordinance or code provision allegedly being violated to determine to whom the ordinance assigns responsibility for compliance. The act itself recognizes that both a property owner and someone other than the owner of the property may be responsible for a violation of a local government code provision. For example, the section providing enforcement procedures for the act, mentions both the "violator"7 and "the owner of property that is subject to an enforcement proceeding[.]"8
Similarly, the notice procedures for the act reflect several options depending upon the identity of the violator. Section
Attorney General Opinion 81-62 notes that a review of the legislative history surrounding adoption of the act "discloses no intent on the part of the Legislature that the board's jurisdiction be limited to only property owners' alleged violations of the enumerated codes thus excluding from its jurisdiction nonproperty owners' violations of designated codes that apply or may apply to nonproperty owners." The Local Government Code Enforcement Boards Act was intended to provide "an equitable, expeditious, effective, and inexpensive method of enforcing any codes and ordinances in force in counties and municipalities[.]"9 As the earlier opinion concludes, "[t]o interpret the Act as providing for an ``equitable, expeditious, effective, and inexpensive method' of enforcement only for violations committed by property owners appears to me to be in contravention of the express intent of the Legislature especially when the terms of the underlying municipal ordinance apply or can be properly construed to apply to nonproperty owners within the incorporated area."10 I am aware of no legislative amendments of the act or case law decided since the 1981 opinion that would change this conclusion. It is my opinion that the conclusion is equally applicable to counties as to municipalities.
Thus, this office has previously concluded that local ordinances and codes may apply or be construed to apply to alleged violations by both property owners and nonproperty owners under the provisions of Part I, Chapter
Further, Florida courts have held that since code violations clearly "run with the land" and subsequent purchasers can be held responsible for bringing their property into compliance with the local code, 12
"[b]y necessity and logic, there is nothing unconstitutional in holding that as the party who has the power to bring the land into code compliance, the current owner should be charged with that responsibility."13
Thus, it would appear that a local code provision defining a "violator" to include the owner of the property upon which code violations exist would not be preempted by or conflict with the terms of Part I, Chapter
In sum, the Local Government Code Enforcement Boards Act does not define the term "violator" for purposes of the act, nor does the use of the term limit its application based on ownership interest in the property upon which a violation occurs. Thus, it is my opinion that the act does not preempt or otherwise operate to prevent Brevard County from adopting an ordinance defining a "violator" to include the owners of real property upon which a code violation may exist when the violation may have been caused by tenants residing on those properties.
Sincerely,
Bill McCollum Attorney General
BM/tgh