Leadership Housing, Inc. v. DEPARTMENY OF REVENUE
This text of 336 So. 2d 1239 (Leadership Housing, Inc. v. DEPARTMENY OF REVENUE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
LEADERSHIP HOUSING, INC., a Delaware Corporation, Petitioner,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE of the State of Florida, Respondent. Arnold Kaplan and Sophie Kaplan, Petitioners,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE OF the State of Florida, Respondent.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*1240 Samuel C. Ullman of Smathers & Thompson, Miami, for petitioners.
Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., and Patricia S. Turner, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, for respondent.
ALDERMAN, Judge.
Leadership Housing, Inc., in Case No. 76-837, and Arnold Kaplan and Sophie Kaplan, in Case No. 76-838, filed Petitions for Writ of Certiorari pursuant to Section 120.68, Florida Statutes (1975) and Fla.App. Rule 4.1. The two petitions have been consolidated since they involve the same issue of law and are related factually.
Petitioners seek to have reviewed certain final agency action of the Department of Revenue of the State of Florida. The facts are not in dispute. Leadership Housing, Inc. is in the business of selling improved residential real property in Broward County, Florida. During 1973 and 1974 it sold nineteen separate homes to nineteen different purchasers, including the Kaplans. At the time of the nineteen sales, each parcel was already encumbered by separate mortgages between Leadership Housing, Inc. and an institutional lender. Each mortgage allowed the lender, with certain exceptions, to accelerate the indebtedness if the property encumbered by the mortgage was sold or transferred by Leadership Housing, Inc. without lender's prior written consent. Each mortgage further provided:
"If Lender has waived the option to accelerate . .. and if Borrower's successor in interest has executed a written assumption agreement accepted in writing by Lender, Lender shall release Borrower from all obligations under this Mortgage and the Note."
Florida documentary stamps were attached to each of the mortgages pursuant to Chapter 201, Florida Statutes, and said mortgages were recorded.
Each of the nineteen sales provided for a partial cash payment and the assumption by the purchaser of the existing mortgage, evidenced by an assumption agreement between the lender and the purchaser. Title was conveyed by a warranty deed which recited that the deed was subject to the existing mortgage which buyer assumed and agreed to pay. On each deed the documentary stamp taxes were computed and paid on the full purchase price pursuant to Section 201.02, Florida Statutes. The surtax imposed by § 201.021, however, was paid only on the amount of cash paid. Subsequent to each of the nineteen sales, a release agreement was entered into between the lender and Leadership Housing, Inc. In consideration of the assumption by purchaser of the note and mortgage, the lender would release Leadership Housing, Inc. from personal liability.
The Department of Revenue assessed documentary stamp surtax and penalties against petitioners based upon the full purchase *1241 price including the amount of the assumed mortgage. The legal issue which we must resolve is whether, based upon the facts set out above, the Department of Revenue properly included as part of the consideration upon which it based its assessment of the surtax imposed by § 201.021(1), the amounts of the various mortgages assumed by the purchasers.
Section 201.021, Florida Statutes (1975), provides as follows:
"Surtax on documents relating to land; land acquisition trust fund.
(1) A documentary surtax, in addition to the tax levied in § 201.02, is levied on those documents taxed by § 201.02 at the rate of fifty-five cents per five hundred dollars of the consideration paid; provided, that when real estate is sold, the consideration, for purposes of this tax, shall not include amounts of existing mortgages on the real estate sold. If the full amount of the consideration is not shown on the face of the document, then the tax shall be at the rate of fifty-five cents on each five hundred dollars or fractional part thereof of the consideration." [Emphasis Added]
It is the position of the Department of Revenue that a mortgage assumed by the purchaser when the seller is expressly released from the obligation by the mortgagee is not an "existing mortgage" as that term is used in § 201.021(1). Instead, it contends, the transaction constitutes a "mortgage assumption and release agreement", extinguishing the original obligation between the seller and lender, and creating a new obligation between the lender and purchaser.
In support of this position respondent relies upon Department of Revenue Rule 12A-4.13(25), Florida Administrative Code, which provides:
"When computing the surtax under Section 201.021, F.S., on a deed of conveyance, the total consideration on which such tax is based includes a mortgage debt which the grantee assumes and agrees to pay when the original mortgagor (grantor) is released from the obligation by the mortgagee."
Additionally respondent finds support for its position in Florida Attorney General's Opinion 073-67 (1973). In answer to a question propounded by the Department of Revenue, the Attorney General expressed his opinion that in computing the surtax due under § 201.021(1) on a deed of conveyance, the total consideration on which such tax is based does include a mortgage which the grantee assumes and agrees to pay when the original mortgagor (grantor) is released from the obligation by the mortgagee. The rationale of the Attorney General's Opinion was that a novation occurs when parties to a contract mutually agree to discharge a valid existing obligation (the original mortgage) and replace it with a new obligation. The Attorney General concluded that the existing obligation would be extinguished, the original mortgagor would be released from liability, and a new mortgage would be created.
The opinions of the Attorney General are entitled to great weight in construing the law of this State, but are not binding on this Court. Beverly v. Division of Beverage of the Department of Business Regulation, 282 So.2d 657 (Fla. 1st DCA 1973). Likewise Revenue Rule 12A-4.13(25) is merely an interpretative rule setting out respondent's position on the point at issue. It is not a substantive rule and has no legislative effect. With all due respect for the Opinion of the Attorney General and interpretation of the Department of Revenue, we have reached a contrary conclusion.
This case turns on the meaning of the following language from § 201.021(1):
"... that when real estate is sold, the consideration, for purposes of this tax, shall not include amounts of existing mortgages on the real estate sold."
In our opinion this language is clear, certain and unambiguous.
Recently the Florida Supreme Court, in State v. Egan, 287 So.2d 1, 4 (Fla. 1973), *1242 quoting from its earlier opinion in Van Pelt v. Hilliard, 75 Fla. 792, 78 So. 693 (1918), said:
"The Legislature must be understood to mean what it has plainly expressed, and this excludes construction. The legislative intent being plainly expressed, so that the act read by itself or in connection with other statutes pertaining to the same subject is clear, certain, and unambiguous, the courts have only the simple and obvious duty to enforce the law according to its terms. Cases cannot be included or excluded merely because there is intrinsically no reason against it.
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