VALENCIA RESERVE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. v. BOYNTON BEACH ASSOCIATES, XIX, LLLP ( 2019 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    VALENCIA RESERVE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    BOYNTON BEACH ASSOCIATES, XIX, LLLP,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D18-1320
    [August 28, 2019]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
    Beach   County;    Peter   D.    Blanc,     Judge;   L.T.   Case     No.
    502016CA007123XXXXMBAB.
    Robert Rivas of Sachs Sax Caplan, P.L., Tallahassee, for appellant.
    Mark F. Bideau and Robert R. Kane III of Greenberg Traurig, P.A., West
    Palm Beach, and Julissa Rodriguez and Jay A. Yagoda of Greenberg
    Traurig, P.A., Miami, for appellee.
    BOATWRIGHT, JOE, Associate Judge.
    Appellant, Valencia Reserve Homeowners Association, Inc. (“HOA”),
    appeals the circuit court’s final order granting partial summary judgment
    in favor of Appellee, Boynton Beach Associates XIX, LLLP (“Developer”).
    The HOA challenges the Developer’s use of certain monies collected from
    homeowners to offset the Developer’s financial obligation to the HOA.
    Specifically, the HOA claims that the Developer’s use of the “working fund
    contribution” to offset its financial obligation to the HOA is prohibited by
    the Homeowners’ Association Act (“HOA Act”), codified in Chapter 720,
    Florida Statutes. We hold that the Developer’s use of the working fund
    contributions to offset its financial obligation to the HOA does not
    contravene Chapter 720. Therefore, we affirm the decision below.
    BACKGROUND
    Valencia Reserve is a single-family home residential community located
    in Palm Beach County. Valencia Reserve’s HOA was established and
    governed pursuant to a Declaration of Covenants, Restrictions and
    Easements (“declaration”) and the HOA Act. The Developer controlled the
    HOA from its inception until the date of turnover, when the Developer gave
    control of the HOA to the community’s homeowners.
    According to the declaration, the Developer was required to pay its
    share of assessments on any lot owned by the Developer while the
    Developer was in control of the HOA. Pursuant to the declaration and the
    HOA act, the Developer had the right to excuse itself from payment of its
    share of assessments related to its lots so long as the Developer obligated
    itself to pay the deficit—i.e., any operating expenses incurred during the
    guarantee period which exceeded the assessments receivable from other
    members. The guarantee period began when the Developer recorded the
    declaration and ended upon the turnover date.
    The declaration defined the term “deficit” as the difference between the
    operating expenses incurred by the HOA during the guarantee period and
    the sum of: 1) the amounts assessed as guaranteed assessments against
    owners during the guarantee period; 2) the “working fund contributions”;
    and 3) any other income of the HOA.
    In order to offset the deficit obligation, the Developer used a provision
    in the declaration called the “Working Fund Contribution.”               The
    declaration’s section entitled “Working Fund Contribution” states as
    follows:
    Each Owner who purchases a Lot with a Home thereon from
    [the Developer] shall pay to the [HOA] at the time legal title is
    conveyed to such Owner, a “Working Fund Contribution.” The
    Working Fund Contribution shall be an amount equal to a
    three (3) months’ share of the annual, non-abated Operating
    Expenses applicable to such Lot pursuant to the initial Budget
    . . . . The purpose of the Working Fund Contribution is to
    insure that the [HOA] will have cash available for initial start-
    up expenses, to meet unforeseen expenditures and to acquire
    additional equipment and services deemed necessary or
    desirable by the Board. Working Fund Contributions are not
    advance payments of Individual Lot Assessments and shall
    have no effect on future Individual Lot Assessments, nor will
    they be held in reserve. . . . Working Fund Contributions . .
    . may also be used to offset Operating Expenses, both during
    the Guarantee Period . . . and thereafter.
    The Developer elected to excuse itself from paying its share of
    assessments and thereby obligated itself to pay the deficit incurred during
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    the guarantee period. Before the turnover, the Developer used the working
    fund contributions to satisfy the deficit, as authorized by the above
    provision.
    The HOA then sued the Developer, claiming that the working fund
    contributions could not be used to offset the deficit obligation under the
    HOA Act. Both parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. The
    circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of the Developer, finding
    that the working fund contributions could be used to offset the deficit
    amount. This appeal follows.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A trial court’s interpretation of a declaration of a homeowners’
    association is subject to de novo review. Klinow v. Island Court at Boca W.
    Prop. Owners’ Ass’n, Inc., 
    64 So. 3d 177
    , 180 (Fla. 4th DCA 2011). “The
    constitution and by-laws of a voluntary association, when subscribed or
    assented to by the members, becomes a contract between each member
    and the association.” Waverly 1 & 2, LLC v. Waverly at Las Olas Condo.
    Ass’n, Inc., 
    242 So. 3d 425
    , 428 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018) (citation omitted).
    “Issues of contract and statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo as
    they raise questions of law.” MacKenzie v. Centex Homes, 
    208 So. 3d 790
    ,
    793 (Fla. 5th DCA 2016).
    APPLICABLE LAW
    “When the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous and
    conveys a clear and definite meaning, there is no occasion for resorting to
    the rules of statutory interpretation and construction; the statute must be
    given its plain and obvious meaning.” A.R. Douglass, Inc., v. McRainey,
    
    137 So. 157
    , 159 (Fla. 1931). “This court is without power to construe an
    unambiguous statute in a way which would extend, modify, or limit its
    express terms or its reasonable and obvious implications. To do so would
    be an abrogation of legislative power.” Am. Bankers Life Assur. Co. of Fla.
    v. Williams, 
    212 So. 2d 777
    , 778 (Fla. 1st DCA 1968). “When a statute is
    susceptible to only one reasonable interpretation, the plain language of the
    statute controls.     Only where the plain language of a statute is
    ambiguous—where a reasonable person could find two different meanings
    leading to two different outcomes—will this Court resort to the tools of
    statutory construction.” See 
    MacKenzie, 208 So. 3d at 793
    (citation
    omitted). Finally, “[a] statute should be interpreted to give effect to every
    clause in it, and to accord meaning and harmony to all of its parts.”
    Giamberini v. Dep’t of Fin. Servs., 
    162 So. 3d 1133
    , 1136 (Fla. 4th DCA
    3
    2015) (citation omitted). “A single word or provision of a statute cannot be
    read in isolation.” 
    Id. “The purposes
    of [the HOA Act] are to give statutory recognition to
    corporations not for profit that operate residential communities in this
    state, to provide procedures for operating homeowners’ associations, and
    to protect the rights of association members without unduly impairing the
    ability of such associations to perform their functions.” § 720.302(1), Fla.
    Stat. (2018). To this end, Section 720.309(1), Florida Statutes (2018),
    states:
    Any grant or reservation made by any document, and any
    contract that has a term greater than 10 years, that is made
    by an association before control of the association is turned
    over to the members other than the developer, and that
    provides for the operation, maintenance, or management of
    the association or common areas, must be fair and
    reasonable.
    With regard to a developer’s financial obligation to an HOA before
    turnover, Section 720.308(1)(b), Florida Statutes (2018), provides:
    While the developer is in control of the homeowners’
    association, it may be excused from payment of its share of
    the operating expenses and assessments related to its parcels
    for any period of time for which the developer has, in the
    declaration, obligated itself to pay any operating expenses
    incurred that exceed the assessments receivable from other
    members and other income of the association.
    Thus, Section 720.308(1)(b) allows a developer to forego paying HOA
    assessments on lots which it owns provided that the developer agrees “to
    pay any operating expenses incurred that exceed the assessments
    receivable from other members and other income of the association.” 
    Id. If a
    developer chooses to rely upon Section 720.308(1)(b), the
    developer’s potential financial obligation to the HOA is calculated using a
    formula outlined in Section 720.308(5), Florida Statutes (2018). Section
    720.308(5) provides:
    The guarantor’s total financial obligation to the association at
    the end of the guarantee period shall be determined on the
    accrual basis using the following formula: the guarantor shall
    pay any deficits that exceed the guaranteed amount, less the
    4
    total regular periodic assessments earned by the association
    from the members other than the guarantor during the
    guarantee period regardless of whether the actual level
    charged was less than the maximum guaranteed amount.
    In other words, at the end of the guarantee period, when the developer
    turns over control of the HOA to the homeowners, the developer must pay
    “any deficits that exceed the guaranteed amount, less the total regular
    periodic assessments” received from other HOA members. 
    Id. An “assessment,”
    as defined by Section 720.301(1), Florida Statutes
    (2018), is a “sum or sums of money payable to the association, to the
    developer or other owner of common areas, or to recreational facilities and
    other properties serving the parcels by the owners of one or more parcels
    as authorized in the governing documents, which if not paid by the owner
    of a parcel, can result in a lien against the parcel.” Further, Section
    720.308(1) and (1)(a), Florida Statutes (2018), provides that “the governing
    documents must describe the manner in which expenses are shared and
    specify the member’s proportional share thereof” and “assessments levied
    pursuant to the annual budget or special assessment must be in the
    member’s proportional share of expenses as described in the governing
    document.” Notably, Sections 720.308(6) and 720.308(4)(b), Florida
    Statutes (2018), prohibit the developer from using “[a]ny portion of the
    parcel assessment which is budgeted for designated capital contributions
    of the association” to pay for operating expenses.
    If an HOA declaration’s terms contravene a governing statute, the term
    is deemed invalid. Palm Bay Towers Corp. v. Brooks, 
    466 So. 2d 1071
    ,
    1074 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984). However, a declaration’s terms are afforded a
    “very strong presumption of validity which arises from the fact that each
    individual [lot] owner purchases his [lot] knowing of and accepting” the
    declaration’s terms. Hidden Harbour Ests., Inc., v. Basso, 
    393 So. 2d 637
    ,
    639 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981).
    ANALYSIS
    The issue before this Court is whether the Developer’s use of the
    working fund contributions to offset its deficit obligation is prohibited by
    Chapter 720 and, in particular, Section 720.308. We begin our analysis
    by noting that the statutory provisions at issue in the instant case are
    clear and unambiguous such that this Court has no occasion to resort to
    the rules of statutory construction. See 
    MacKenzie, 208 So. 3d at 793
    .
    Thus, we must give the relevant provisions in Chapter 720 their plain and
    obvious meanings. In doing so, we hold that the declaration’s terms, which
    5
    permitted the Developer to use the working fund contributions to offset its
    deficit obligation, did not contravene Chapter 720. Therefore, we affirm
    the circuit court’s final order granting partial summary judgment in the
    Developer’s favor for the following reasons.
    First, the declaration’s section entitled “Working Fund Contribution”
    clearly stated that each lot owner would be obligated to pay an amount
    equal to three months’ share of the initial budget’s annual, non-abated
    operating expenses. The declaration specified that these funds were due
    at the time legal title was conveyed to the lot owner. Significantly, the
    declaration specifically stated that these funds could be used for, among
    other things, initial startup expenses, unforeseen expenditures, and “to
    offset Operating Expenses, both during the Guarantee Period . . . and
    thereafter.” The declaration also explicitly stated that the working fund
    contribution could be used to reduce the operating expense deficit. As the
    declaration contained these terms at the time of recording, every Valencia
    Reserve lot owner agreed to pay the working fund contribution and knew
    that these funds could be used to cover operating expenses and offset the
    Developer’s deficit obligation. See Hidden Harbour Ests., 
    Inc., 393 So. 2d at 639
    . Given that each lot owner expressly agreed to these terms upon
    completing the property purchase, we similarly find that the declaration’s
    provision authorizing the Developer to use the working fund contributions
    to offset its deficit obligation was “fair and reasonable” as required by
    Section 720.309(1).
    Second, the Developer’s use of the working fund contributions to pay
    for operating expenses did not violate Sections 720.308(4)(b) and
    720.308(6). Under these sections, a developer may not pay for operating
    expenses using lot assessments which have been budgeted for designated
    capital contributions. Here, the working fund contributions were not
    budgeted for designated capital contributions, thus, Sections
    720.308(4)(b) and 720.308(6) do not apply.
    Third, we agree with the circuit court’s conclusion that the working
    fund contributions qualified as regular periodic assessments for the
    purpose of calculating the Developer’s final deficit obligation under Section
    720.308(5). Per the declaration, all lot owners were required to pay the
    working fund contribution at the time of conveyance. The declaration
    further stated that the working fund contributions could be used to pay
    the HOA’s operating expenses or offset operating expenses during or after
    the guarantee period.       Under Chapter 720, nothing prevents an
    assessment from being used to pay an HOA’s operating expenses.
    Consequently, the working fund contribution would qualify as an
    assessment as it could be used to pay the expenses of the HOA.
    6
    Although only paid once, the working fund contribution was equal to
    three months’ share of the annual regular assessments calculated
    pursuant to the initial budget. In essence, the working fund contribution
    was the first regular periodic assessment, due as an upfront, lumpsum
    payment. Thereafter, periodic payments were due at regular intervals set
    by the declaration.      Accordingly, the working fund contribution is
    consistent with a regular periodic assessment that could be used to pay or
    offset operating expenses.
    In conclusion, the use of the working fund contributions to offset the
    Developer’s deficit obligation did not violate the HOA Act. We find nothing
    in Chapter 720 that prohibits the Developer’s action in this case. If the
    legislature wishes to prevent such action, it can do so by enacting
    legislation to that effect.
    Finally, we find no merit to the HOA’s argument that genuine issues of
    material fact precluded summary judgment. The parties filed cross
    motions for summary judgment and stipulated that there were no material
    facts in dispute. Moreover, the HOA has not identified any disputed
    material facts to support its argument that summary judgment was
    improper.
    Therefore, we affirm the decision below.
    Affirmed.
    LEVINE, C.J. and KUNTZ, J., concur.
    *          *       *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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