Judges: Bill McCollum, Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/23/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Ms. Evans:
On behalf of the Housing Finance Authority of Palm Beach County, Florida, you ask the following questions:
1. May a housing finance authority formed pursuant to Part IV, Chapter
2. May a housing finance authority loan surplus funds to for-profit developers for the construction, purchase, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of qualifying housing under section
In sum:
The Housing Finance Authority of Palm Beach County may loan funds to for-profit developers for the development of qualifying housing or the construction, purchase, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of qualifying housing under the provisions of Part IV, Chapter
The Housing Finance Authority of Palm Beach County, Florida, (authority) was created pursuant to Part IV, Chapter
Part IV, Chapter
"The financing, acquisition, construction, reconstruction, and rehabilitation of housing and of the real and personal property and other facilities necessary, incidental, and appurtenant thereto are exclusively public uses and purposes for which public money may be spent, advanced, loaned, or granted and are governmental functions of public concern."4
Pursuant to the act, the authority may issue bonds5 and make and execute contracts.6 It is authorized to make loans directly to persons or families qualified under the act to receive assistance and "[t]o own real and personal property acquired through the use of surplus funds or through public and private partnerships provided that the obligations of the authority are limited to project revenues and no less than 50 percent of the units owned by a housing finance authority shall benefit very low-income families or low-income families."7
Authorities are further authorized to make loans to lending institutions to be used by such institutions for the making of new mortgages for qualifying housing developments, and:
"To deposit funds into an account with a lending institution to providesecurity for the lending institution to make loans to eligible persons for the purchase, construction, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of single-family homes or to developers for the construction,reconstruction, or rehabilitation of qualifying housing developments orportions thereof. No funds may be deposited with a lending institution in which any depositing housing finance authority member, officer, or employee has an ownership interest. . . ."8 (e.s.)
Specific to your inquiry, section
"(a) To make loans or grant surplus funds to corporations that qualify as not-for-profit corporations under s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and under the laws of this state, for the development of affordable housing; and
(b) To do anything necessary or appropriate to further the purpose for which a housing finance authority is established, pursuant to s.
Subsection (3) of the section gives authorities the power
"[t]o purchase or make commitments to purchase or to make loans for such purpose, and to take assignments of, from lending institutions acting as a principal or an agent of the housing finance authority, mortgage loans and promissory notes accompanying such mortgage loans, including federally insured mortgage loans or participations with lending institutions in such promissory notes and mortgage loans for the construction, purchase, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of the qualifying housing development or portion thereof; provided, that the proceeds of sale or equivalent moneys shall be reinvested in mortgage loans."
A "[q]ualifying housing development" is defined as
"[A]ny work or improvement located or to be located in the state, including real property, buildings, and any other real and personal property, designed or intended for the primary purpose of providing decent, safe, and sanitary residential housing for four or more families, at least 60 percent of whom are eligible persons, whether new construction, the acquisition of existing residential housing, or the remodeling, improvement, rehabilitation, or reconstruction of existing housing, together with such related nonhousing facilities as the authority determines to be necessary, convenient, or desirable."9
As you have recognized, housing finance authorities are statutorily created entities possessing only such powers as have been expressly granted or necessarily implied therefrom.10 While an express power duly conferred may include the implied authority to use the means necessary to carry out the express power, this office has stated on numerous occasions that such implied authority may not warrant the exercise of a substantive power not conferred.11 Moreover, any reasonable doubt as to the lawful existence of a particular power sought to be exercised is to be resolved against such an exercise.12
In Attorney General Opinion 2000-14, this office was asked whether a housing finance authority was authorized to lend surplus funds to private individuals to finance a for-profit, twelve-unit apartment complex for low-income housing. While recognizing that section
Applying the rationale of Attorney General Opinion 2000-14 to the situation you have proposed, it does not appear that the housing finance authority would be precluded from loaning its surplus funds to a private individual or entity for the development of qualifying housing. Rather, the loaning of such funds would be authorized to fulfill the purposes of the Florida Financing Authority Law.
Accordingly, it is my opinion that the Housing Finance Authority of Palm Beach County may loan funds to for-profit developers for the development of qualifying housing or the construction, purchase, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of qualifying housing under the provisions of Part IV, Chapter
Sincerely,
Bill McCollum Attorney General
BM/tals