Judges: Robert L. Shevin, Attorney General Prepared by: J. Kendrick Tucker, Assistant Attorney General
Filed Date: 1/8/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
QUESTION:
Do the furniture, fixtures, equipment, and furnishings located in common areas of condominiums, such as recreation rooms, exercise rooms, offices, and lobbies, qualify as household goods within the meaning of the Florida Statutes and are they thus exempt from the tangible personal property tax?
SUMMARY:
If condominium units are owned by persons residing thereon and making their permanent home therein, the furniture, tools and hobby equipment, appliances, and furnishings located in the common areas of said condominiums and which have retained their character as personal property are household goods and personal effects within the meaning of ss.
You further note in your letter that in various cases the developer of the condominium will give the above-mentioned items of personal property to the homeowners' association after the project is completed or the developer or a separate corporation will lease said items to the association.
Your question is answered in the affirmative with the qualifications and exceptions as noted below.
Initially, I assume that none of the items of personal property mentioned in your question have become permanently affixed to the real property so as to become part of the realty themselves. See, Commercial Finance Co. v. Brooksville Hotel Co.,
As a caveat, I note that since "fixtures" imply a permanent annexation or affixing to the realty, they would appear not to qualify as personalty and hence not as household goods. Kramer v. Beebe,
With regard to the exemption from the tangible personal property tax for household goods and personal effects, the pertinent statutory provisions are as follows:
"There shall be exempt from taxation to every person residing and making his or her permanent home in this state household goods and personal effects. Title to such household goods and personaleffects may be held individually, by the entireties, jointly or incommon with others." (Emphasis supplied.) Section
Household goods are defined as:
". . . [w]earing apparel, furniture, appliances, and other itemsordinarily found in the home and used for the comfort of the ownerand his family. Household goods are not held for commercial purposes or resale." (Emphasis supplied.) Section
Personal effects are stated to be "a category of personal property which includes such items as clothing, jewelry, tools and hobby equipment. . . ." Rule 12B-1.101, Florida Administrative Code.
Therefore, from the foregoing provisions, household goods and personal effects of an unlimited amount are exempt from taxation to every person residing and making his permanent home in this state; title to such property may be held jointly or in common with others; and household goods are defined by statute to be furniture, appliances, and other items ordinarily found in the home and used for the comfort of the owner or the family. Household goods would not include furnishings, appliances, or equipment used for a business or commercial purpose. City of Tarpon Springs v. Chrysostomides,
I am not unmindful of the sometimes tortious progression of the law with regard to the real property homestead exemption of five thousand dollars for condominiums or other multiple dwelling units, which progression eventually led to statutory and constitutional changes granting the exemption to individual condominium units. See, Overstreet v. Tubin,
What is important in answering your inquiry regarding the exemption for household goods and personal effects from the tangible personal property tax is whether the items mentioned are in fact household goods or personal effects and whether the condominium unit owners own them "jointly or in common with others" within the meaning of the aforesaid s.
The term household goods has been defined as "articles of household use of a permanent nature, which are not consumed in their enjoyment; articles with which a residence is equipped, other than fixtures, designed in their manufacture as instruments of the household. It fairly embraces articles commonly used in a family, including everything about the house that is usually held and enjoyed therewith, and that tends to the comfort and accommodation of the household . . . ."
The term personal effects is defined in Black's law dictionary as "articles associated with person, as property having a more or less intimate relation to person of possessor; ``effects' meaning movable or chattel property of any kind." Personal effects is a term generally including such tangible property as is worn or carried about the person; effects movable or chattel property of any kind; goods and items of property having a more or less intimate relation to the person. Personal effects have been held to be personal property having a more or less intimate relation with person of the owner, such as wearing apparel, jewelry, baggage, silverware, etc. (Citations omitted.) Attorney General Opinion 065-19.
In light of the definitions of household goods and personal effects as defined above and in s.
As to the ownership of the common areas and improvements thereon, Ch.
"Condominium is that form of ownership of condominium property under which units of improvements are subject to ownership by one or more owners, and there is appurtenant to each unit as partthereof an undivided share in the common elements. (Emphasis supplied.) Section 711.03(7), F.S. (2) There shall pass with a unit as appurtenances thereto: (a) An undivided share in thecommon elements. (Emphasis supplied.) Section 711.04, F.S. (1) Common elements includes within its meaning the following items:
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(b) All parts of the improvements which are not included within the units.
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(2) The declaration may designate other parts of the condominium property as common elements." (Emphasis supplied.) Section 711.06, F.S.
Since the above-quoted statutes grant to each condominium unit owner an undivided share in the common areas of the condominium and the improvements thereon, and since this ownership has been judicially recognized as in common with others (Sterling Village Condominium, Inc. v. Breitenbach,
I note that for purposes of the federal income tax, if the condominium is used solely for residential purposes by the unit owners, then the unit owners will likely be treated as tenants in common as to the common areas and as individual owners of their own units. See, 25 New York University Institute Federal Taxation 79, 90 (1967) and University of Fla. L. Rev., 529, 533, Vol. XXI, No. 4, Spring 1969. It has also been suggested that there is no serious obstacle to applying the homestead exemption laws for real property not only to the condominium units themselves but to the units' proportionate interest in the common areas. [See] 15 Am.Jur.2d Condominiums, Etc. s. 15, p. 998. I likewise see no cogent reason why the household goods and personal effects tangible personal property tax exemption of s.
I am not troubled by the fact that the common areas and the personal property therein are physically separated from the individual condominium units. Rather, s.