Bill Amendment: FL S0566 | 2018 | Regular Session

NOTE: For additional amemendments please see the Bill Drafting List
Bill Title: Unlawful Detention by a Transient Occupant

Status: 2018-03-26 - Chapter No. 2018-83 [S0566 Detail]

Download: Florida-2018-S0566-Senate_Committee_Amendment_260152.html
       Florida Senate - 2018                        COMMITTEE AMENDMENT
       Bill No. SB 566
       
       
       
       
       
       
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                              LEGISLATIVE ACTION                        
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       The Committee on Judiciary (Young) recommended the following:
       
    1         Senate Amendment (with title amendment)
    2  
    3         Delete lines 32 - 159
    4  and insert:
    5  occupant of residential property; recovery of transient
    6  occupant’s personal belongings.—
    7         (1) As used in this section, the term “transient occupant”
    8  means a person whose residency in a dwelling intended for
    9  residential use has occurred for a brief length of time, is not
   10  pursuant to a lease, and whose occupancy was intended as
   11  transient in nature.
   12         (a) Factors that establish that a person is a transient
   13  occupant include, but are not limited to:
   14         1. The person does not have an ownership interest,
   15  financial interest, or leasehold interest in the property
   16  entitling him or her to occupancy of the property.
   17         2. The person does not have any property utility
   18  subscriptions.
   19         3. The person cannot produce documentation, correspondence,
   20  or identification cards sent or issued by a government agency,
   21  including, but not limited to, the Department of Highway Safety
   22  and Motor Vehicles or the supervisor of elections, which show
   23  that the person used the property address as an address of
   24  record with the agency within the previous 12 months does not
   25  use the property address as an address of record with any
   26  governmental agency, including, but not limited to, the
   27  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles or the
   28  supervisor of elections.
   29         4. The person does not receive mail at the property.
   30         4.5. The person pays minimal or no rent for his or her stay
   31  at the property.
   32         5.6. The person does not have a designated space of his or
   33  her own, such as a room, at the property.
   34         6.7. The person has minimal, if any, personal belongings at
   35  the property.
   36         7.8. The person has an apparent permanent residence
   37  elsewhere.
   38         (b) Minor contributions made for the purchase of household
   39  goods, or minor contributions towards other household expenses,
   40  do not establish residency.
   41         (2) A transient occupant unlawfully detains a residential
   42  property if the transient occupant remains in occupancy of the
   43  residential property after the party entitled to possession of
   44  the property has directed the transient occupant to leave. A
   45  transient occupancy terminates when a transient occupant begins
   46  to reside elsewhere, surrenders the key to the dwelling, or
   47  agrees to leave the dwelling when directed by a law enforcement
   48  officer in receipt of an affidavit under subsection (3), the
   49  party entitled to possession, or a court. A transient occupancy
   50  is not extended by the presence of personal belongings of a
   51  former transient occupant.
   52         (3) Any law enforcement officer may, upon receipt of a
   53  sworn affidavit of the party entitled to possession that a
   54  person who is a transient occupant is unlawfully detaining
   55  residential property, direct a transient occupant to surrender
   56  possession of residential property. The sworn affidavit must set
   57  forth the facts, including the applicable factors listed in
   58  paragraph (1)(a), which establish that a transient occupant is
   59  unlawfully detaining residential property.
   60         (a) A person who fails to comply with the direction of the
   61  law enforcement officer to surrender possession or occupancy
   62  violates s. 810.08. In any prosecution of a violation of s.
   63  810.08 related to this section, whether the defendant was
   64  properly classified as a transient occupant is not an element of
   65  the offense, the state is not required to prove that the
   66  defendant was in fact a transient occupant, and the defendant’s
   67  status as a permanent resident is not an affirmative defense.
   68         (b) A person wrongfully removed pursuant to this subsection
   69  has a cause of action for wrongful removal against the person
   70  who requested the removal, and may recover injunctive relief and
   71  compensatory damages. However, a wrongfully removed person does
   72  not have a cause of action against the law enforcement officer
   73  or the agency employing the law enforcement officer absent a
   74  showing of bad faith by the law enforcement officer.
   75         (4) A party entitled to possession of a dwelling has a
   76  cause of action for unlawful detainer against a transient
   77  occupant pursuant to s. 82.04. The party entitled to possession
   78  is not required to notify the transient occupant before filing
   79  the action. If the court finds that the defendant is not a
   80  transient occupant but is instead a tenant of residential
   81  property governed by part II of chapter 83, the court may not
   82  dismiss the action without first allowing the plaintiff to give
   83  the transient occupant the notice required by that part and to
   84  thereafter amend the complaint to pursue eviction under that
   85  part.
   86         (5) The party entitled to possession of a dwelling shall
   87  allow a former transient occupant to recover his or her personal
   88  belongings at reasonable times and under reasonable conditions.
   89         (a) Unless otherwise agreed to, a reasonable time for the
   90  recovery of the former transient occupant’s personal belongings
   91  generally means a time period within 10 days after termination
   92  of the transient occupancy, when the party entitled to
   93  possession of the dwelling or a trusted third party can be
   94  present at the dwelling to supervise the recovery of the
   95  belongings.
   96         (b) If the party entitled to possession of the dwelling
   97  reasonably believes that the former transient occupant has
   98  engaged in misconduct or has a history of violence or drug or
   99  alcohol abuse, it is reasonable for the party entitled to
  100  possession of the dwelling to impose additional conditions on
  101  access to the dwelling or the personal belongings. These
  102  conditions may include, but are not limited to, the presence of
  103  a law enforcement officer, the use of a mover registered with
  104  the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, or the use
  105  of a trusted third party to recover the personal belongings. For
  106  purposes of this paragraph, misconduct includes, but is not
  107  limited to:
  108         1. Intentional damage to the dwelling, to property owned by
  109  the party entitled to possession of the dwelling, or to property
  110  owned by another occupant of the dwelling;
  111         2. Physical or verbal abuse directed at the party entitled
  112  to possession of the dwelling or another occupant of the
  113  dwelling; or
  114         3. Theft of property belonging to the party entitled to
  115  possession of the dwelling or property of another occupant of
  116  the dwelling.
  117         (c) The person entitled to possession of a dwelling may
  118  presume that the former transient occupant has abandoned
  119  personal belongings left at the dwelling if the former transient
  120  occupant does not seek to recover them within a reasonable time
  121  after the transient occupant surrenders occupancy of the
  122  dwelling. The time period to recover personal belongings may be
  123  extended due to the unavailability of the party entitled to
  124  possession of the dwelling to supervise the recovery of the
  125  personal belongings. Circumstances that may shorten the time
  126  include, but are not limited to, the poor condition of or the
  127  perishable or hazardous nature of the personal belongings, the
  128  intent of the former transient occupant to abandon or discard
  129  the belongings, or the significant impairment of the use of the
  130  dwelling by the storage of the former transient occupant’s
  131  personal belongings.
  132         (d) If the person entitled to possession of the dwelling
  133  unreasonably withholds access to a former transient occupant’s
  134  personal belongings, the former transient occupant may bring a
  135  civil action for damages or the recovery of the property. The
  136  court shall award the prevailing party reasonable attorney fees
  137  and costs.
  138         (6) This section shall be construed in recognition of the
  139  right
  140  
  141  ================= T I T L E  A M E N D M E N T ================
  142  And the title is amended as follows:
  143         Delete lines 11 - 20
  144  and insert:
  145         recover personal belongings at reasonable times and
  146         under reasonable conditions; specifying a reasonable
  147         time to recover personal belongings; authorizing a
  148         party entitled to possession of the dwelling, under
  149         certain circumstances, to impose additional conditions
  150         on access to the dwelling or personal belongings;
  151         providing a presumption of when a former transient
  152         occupant has abandoned his or her personal belongings;
  153         providing circumstances in which the period for
  154         recovering personal belongings may be extended or
  155         shortened; authorizing a former transient

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