Villages of Avignon Community Development v. Ken Burton, Jr., Manatee County Tax Collector

215 So. 3d 127, 2017 WL 1040739, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 3592
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 17, 2017
DocketCase 2D16-1048
StatusPublished

This text of 215 So. 3d 127 (Villages of Avignon Community Development v. Ken Burton, Jr., Manatee County Tax Collector) 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.

Bluebook
Villages of Avignon Community Development v. Ken Burton, Jr., Manatee County Tax Collector, 215 So. 3d 127, 2017 WL 1040739, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 3592 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

VILLANTI, Chief Judge.

Villages of Avignon Community Development District (the Villages) seeks review of the final declaratory judgment entered in favor of Ken Burton, Jr., Manatee County Tax Collector, in an action to determine the priority of competing liens held by the Villages and Manatee County against the same real property. The parties agreed on the facts, and the case was decided on the Villages’ motion for judgment on the pleadings and the Tax Collector’s motion for summary judgment. After extensive argument, the trial court held that the ad valorem tax liens held by the County were “superior” to the assessment liens held by the Villages, and it authorized the Tax Collector to issue tax certificates that would be sold subject to the Villages’ assessment liens. After a thorough review of the record and the supplemental briefs filed by the parties, and after considering the points raised at oral argument, we affirm, but we write to certify a question of great public importance to the supreme court.

As noted, the facts are not in dispute and center on three parcels of real property in Manatee County. The County assessed ad valorem property taxes against these three parcels as authorized by article VII, section 9(a), of the Florida Constitution, which provides that counties and municipalities shall levy ad valorem taxes. Section 197.122(1), Florida Statutes (2015), which codifies and effectuates this constitutional provision, provides, in pertinent part:

All taxes imposed pursuant to the State Constitution and laws of this state shall be a first lien, superior to all other liens, on any property against which the taxes have been assessed and shall continue in full force from January 1 of the year the taxes were levied until discharged by payment or until barred under chapter 95.

Because the ad valorem taxes for these parcels are unpaid, the County requested that the Tax Collector issue tax certificates for the parcels, to be sold pursuant to section 197.432(1).

However, the parcels at issue are also part of the Villages of Avignon Community Development District. As a community development district (CDD), the Villages is authorized by statute to levy and collect special assessments for the development and maintenance of CDD facilities. See *129 § 190.021(2), Fla. Stat. (2015). The Villages levied assessments on these same three parcels, those assessments were unpaid, and the Villages recorded liens for the unpaid assessments against the parcels. As was its prerogative, when the assessments remained unpaid, the Villages filed a foreclosure action against the properties, and it took title to the properties subject to the County’s tax liens.

The dispute underlying this case arose when the County informed the Villages of its intent to have the Tax Collector issue tax certificates for the parcels in question to satisfy the County’s liens. The Villages took the position that the Tax Collector could not legally issue tax certificates because doing so would impair the status of the Villages’ assessment liens, which it argued were coequal with the County’s tax liens under section 190.021(9). The Villages claimed that because its assessment liens were coequal with the County’s tax liens, the Tax Collector could not issue tax certificates while the Villages owns the parcels because to do so would improperly “wipe out” its coequal assessment liens. In response to this dispute between the Villages and the County, the Tax Collector filed a declaratory judgment action to resolve the question of the relative priority of the liens and to obtain a determination of its obligations under chapter 197. In its final judgment, the trial court declared that the Tax Collector could issue tax certificates but that the certificates would be sold subject to the Villages’ liens. The Villages has appealed this ruling.

As an initial matter, we agree with the Villages that the trial court’s decision regarding the relative priority of the parties’ liens is incorrect, but we conclude that the error is a semantic, rather than substantive, one. In our view, the plain language of section 190.021(9) could not express a clearer intent. That statute plainly says that CDD liens are “coequal with the lien of state, county, municipal, and school board taxes.” § 190.021(9). Therefore, the trial court’s ruling that the County’s tax liens were “superior” to the Villages’ assessment liens is simply incorrect. Further, case law that determined the priority of these types of liens based on the relative “dignity” arising from their source, i.e., either constitutional or statutory, is no longer good law in light of the 1999 enactment of section 190.021(9). Therefore, to the extent that the trial court concluded that the County’s tax liens were superior to the Villages’ assessment liens, the trial court’s ruling was incorrect.

However, that decision does not fully resolve the matter before this court. In both its answer and affirmative defenses and in its motion for judgment on the pleadings, the Villages argued that the coequal status of its lien meant that the County was prohibited from having the Tax Collector issue tax certificates to satisfy its liens until such time as the Villages conveyed the property to “a non-exempt entity or entities,” and it affirmatively sought a ruling forbidding the issuance of the tax certificates. In making this argument, the Villages relied on the supreme court’s decision in Kostecos v. Johnson, 85 So.2d 594 (Fla. 1956), which dealt with coequal liens held by a county and a drainage district. As explained below, we do not believe Kostecos requires the result advocated by the Villages, and we question whether the “construct” set forth in Koste-cos remains good law today.

In Kostecos, Sarasota County had a lien against certain property for unpaid county taxes, and the Pearce Drainage District had a coequal lien against the same property for unpaid drainage district taxes. Id. at 595, 597. The county foreclosed first on its tax liens and issued a Veterans’ Homestead Act deed to Johnson. Id. at 595. The *130 drainage district foreclosed on its lien shortly thereafter (without making the county a party), and the court issued a Special Master’s deed to Kostecos. Id. at 596. Kostecos then sued Johnson for ejectment, claiming that his later deed was superior to Johnson’s earlier deed. Id.

Kostecos argued that by foreclosing first, the county had traded its lien for a deed, making its deed subject to the drainage district’s lien and making his deed from the drainage district lien proceedings superior to the earlier deed. Id. at 596-97. But the supreme court disagreed. The supreme court held that when the county converted its liens into title, it was simply holding title as security for the payment of taxes due to the government. Id. at 599. Therefore, “[t]he equality of position held by the governmental unit (the county) is not destroyed by substituting title to the land itself for the liens it formerly held absent legislative action so providing.” Id Instead, both liens were maintained and would have to be satisfied by the subsequent purchasers. To the extent that the court determined that the drainage district’s lien was held in suspension while the county owned the property, it did so in large part because “no procedure was at that time provided for enforcing such drainage tax liens against the county after it acquired its title.” Id. at 598.

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Bluebook (online)
215 So. 3d 127, 2017 WL 1040739, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 3592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/villages-of-avignon-community-development-v-ken-burton-jr-manatee-fladistctapp-2017.