Why                Florida's Adverse Possession Law is Unfair and                Unconstitutional in 2014
              
          I think it                important, when one contemplates adverse possession of                realty, to do more than merely to ask an attorney what he                thinks about adverse possession.  The attorney and the                inquirer should carefully research prior to answering so                as to know what the courts think of it. Unfortunately, too                few attorneys have experience with the type of adverse                possession about which I write, that of real estate which                the owner has abandoned because of foreclosure.  The owner                knows he will eventually lose the house, and servicer's                preservation thugs start harassing the owner at some                point, so the owner packs up and leaves for good.                 Opportunists see that as an opportunity to squat in the                place and maybe win it by adverse possession.
              
Hey, it could                happen. The bank might get a final judgment of foreclosure                of an owner-abandoned property where an adverse possession                squatter lives, then get the court to set it aside because                the preservation crew said it was in wretched shape.  But                the adverse possessor moved in and cleaned it up and made                repairs.  Maybe the owner will return to claim it.  Maybe                not.
              
That constitutes our issue of primary concern in these days where a 1.5 million residences lie vacant in Florida, may of them apparently abandoned and left to vandals and ruination. Those could become good residences for people willing to go through the pain of adverse possession requirements. We should consider the opinions of courts of prime importance in the matter of adverse possession.
I have                appended a case opinion below regarding an adverse                possession dispute over ownership of a pond.  It has                nothing to do with adverse possession of real estate which                the owner abandoned in foreclosure.  
              
The courts                clearly favor the owners in adverse possession disputes.                 This explains why sheriffs and prosecutors so                gleefully lock up squatters for grand theft who attempt                adverse possession of foreclosure-abandoned residences.                 As the below opinion shows, the courts hold adverse                possession claimants to very high standards of proof.  To                BEGIN WITH, they MUST NOTIFY the owner of possession of                the property.  Many squatters start off by ignoring that                requirement.  New laws (enacted since the below opinion)                require the property appraiser to notify the owner of the                adverse possession.  That becomes impossible when the                owner has intentionally vanished and run off to a foreign                land without leaving a forwarding mail or email address or                phone number.  And that constitutes a core fault with the                below opinion as applied to adverse possession of realty                abandoned in foreclosure.  The squatter has no way of                knowing how to contact the owner.  That means the squatter                must do it by notification in a newspaper partly devoted                to publication of legal notices.
              
I have                scoured Google Scholar for Florida appellate opinions                related to adverse possession in conjunction with criminal                charges of grand theft, the charge sheriffs and                prosecutors seem to prefer, but in my opinion absolutely                cannot prove.  I have found nothing.  Presently,                prosecutors BASH adverse possessors with charges of grand                theft, and sheriffs and cops arrest without even seeing an                affidavit of probable cause in support of a questionable                warrant for arrest. They simply seem to HATE opportunist                squatters who take steps to live in a nice house the owner                abandoned in foreclosure.
              
If you want                to read further considerations on this issue send email to                adversepossession+subscribe@googlegroups.com, and then                visit the group archives once you get signed up.
              
Meanwhile                exercise your voting rights to correct the adverse                possession laws.  If owners continue to abandon realty,                then the legislature should impose penalties on them and                provide some way to put those residences to good use                during the foreclosure litigation process, and penalize                mortgagees for dragging out foreclosures without having                the properties occupied.  Perhaps counties should take the                properties by eminent domain that sit vacant for more than                3 months, and rent them out for their costs of maintenance                and supervision, and return them after the court disposes                of the property and a new occupant comes to live in it.  I                consider this the best way to care for abandoned homes.
          
Remember:                 when prosecutors and law enforcers persecute people for                exercising their common law rights, the only practical                solution lies in the political method - creating changes                in law to punish persecutors and to adjust and clarify                rights.  Adverse possession has a history 600 years deep                in Anglo-American statutory and common law.  It began when                common people lived off the land and took untended                portions of wealthy landowners' neglected property to                produce crops, livestock, and derivatives.  They paid a                portion of that to the King's tax collectors.  And therefore,                they put the land to its highest, best use.  Only if the                owner asked to have the squatter removed would the King                allow interference with the squatter.  And then the King                would expect the owner to continue paying taxes for use of                that parcel of land.  But in those days little or no harm                came to a community because the owner let the land lie                fallow.
              
Nowadays city                dwellers generally earn their livings from employment                having nothing to do with their residences.  And they pay                taxes from their income, not from husbandry and                agriculture.   Furthermore, homes abandoned or neglected                through foreclosure cause great harm to the community,                because of the negligence of both the owner and the                mortgagee, and also because of the length of time the                courts require to handle the avalanche of foreclosures.                 The Legislature has failed to make accommodations for                these cultural and business phenomena.  It has made the                adverse possession process more burdensome, but it has                imposed no penalties (like jail time or fines or                pre-emptive eminent domain) upon either the mortgagor who                abandoned the property or the mortgagee who lets the                property go to ruin during foreclosure delays lasting half                a decade and more.
              
Because of                the difference in taxation, the mortgagor usually pays the                taxes through the servicer and escrows the monthly amount                from mortgage payments necessary to retire the tax                obligation annually.  No law requires this.  The mortgage                stipulates it, but that should not impact the tax collector.                 If the mortgagor abandons the property and stops paying                taxes and someone squats there in contemplation of adverse                possession and cannot pay the taxes because the tax                collector returns payments, accepting instead the                mortgagor's, then the tax collector and the courts should                consider that payment a form of compliance by the squatter                who has filed the requisite adverse possession documents,                for the mortgagee knows full well that the mortgagor has                stopped making payments.  In any case should a dispute                over this arise, only a court should settle it.
              
Florida's                latest incarnation of adverse possession law in 95.18                 (appended immediately below) contains certain absurdities                that cause readers to conflate its meanings, and that has                severely chilled exercise of the common law right of                adverse possession.  I shall point out the areas that I                think might not stand up to a challenge of constitutional                or other rights guarantees.
              
1 reads                 "under a claim of title exclusive of any other right."                 This seems like nonsense to me, for a person who does not                own the property (and has no title to it), cannot claim                title except by a quiet title action or inheritance or                court-ordered forfeiture of a prior title holder.  And                even a mortgagee has no actual title to the property, so                if a squatter fulfills the requirements of adverse                possession, perhaps a court would determine that the                mortgagee must forfeit the claim.  But since the mortgage                operates as a lien, perhaps the court would declare that                the lien still exists and the adverse possessor may not                dispose of the property without discharging the                mortgagor's debt, or that the mortgagee may enforce the                lien through foreclosure sale regardless of adverse                possession.  In the end, I think it appropriate that the                court honor the lien and allow the foreclosure sale to                proceed, and the adverse possessor to lose the property                just as the owner would had the owner not abandoned the                property.
              
In any case,                the foregoing quoted language seems to make adverse                possession impossible because squatters never have proper                claim of title.
              
1a makes no                sense to require the adverse possessor to pay the taxes.                 ANYONE could pay the taxes.  What difference does it make                whether the adverse possessor/squatter paid them?  For                example, the mortgagee could pay them without that counting                toward any right of possession.  
              
3d seems                absurd to me and it unduly burdens the squatter seeking                adverse possession with requirements that violate the                squatter's common law right to adverse possession.  And requiring                a notarized attestation exposes the squatter to risk of                prosecution for perjury unnecessarily, since returning the                incorrect information would only encumber the consummation                of adverse possession.  That should suffice to guarantee                correct information.
              
3e extraneously                exceeds the needs of the property appraiser, for the squatter                already must obey zoning  and HOA restrictions or suffer                fines, and since the government never required that                information of the owner, it violates the squatter's right                of privacy under Florida Constituiton Article 1 Section 23.
              
I have already challenged the principle of 3g with respect to taxes. I makes no difference who pays the taxes if the owner or owner's agent doesn't pay them, and government has no fundamental basis for requiring the squatter to pay them if someone else beside the owner pays them. Furthermore, Florida already has laws governing sale of tax certificates at a premium to investors who thereby pay the taxes. A squatter seeking adverse possession should have the same right to delay paying taxes as the owner does. In Florida that means letting investors pay them (see F.S. 197.432) for two years, and in the third year (see F.S. 197.502) allowing the investor to force a tax deed sale if the owner (or squatter) does not pay those taxes plus the premium. Thus this provision is unfair by virtue of denying equal protection of the law to the squatter and owner, and it is unduly burdensome to the squatter.
4a should relieve the squatter of any requirement to notify the owner that the squatter will occupy the property without permission, and this law should clarify that. If the property Appraiser cannot reach the owner, then it stands to reason the adverse possession squatter cannot either.
4 might seem like a good idea, but it actually makes no sense and imposes an unreasonable burden on the property appraiser that tax payers must pay for. To begin with, the main issue at hand deals with adverse possession of property abandoned in foreclosure. That means the owner RAN OFF and will not receive mail at the address of the property, and might not have left a forwarding address, so as to avoid the hounding by bill collectors. Secondly, the owner owes the community the duty to care for the property, and abandoning it is a clear breach of that duty. If the owner had cared for the property, no squatter would have tried to take it by adverse possession. The abandonment makes it obvious that the owner does not care whether someone squats on the property, or expects the community to take over the owner's responsibility.
9 and 10                operate like an open season hunting license for squatters,                and that violates core principles of adverse possession.  These two provisions                violate Florida Constitution Article I Section 2 basic                rights of natural persons. The Legislature had                attempted to convert adverse possession into a crime and                has thereby violated the common law right of adverse                possession without providing a statutory substitute.                 First of all, a squatter does not trespass by squatting on                an abandoned property.  If the owner does not care, the                Legislature has no business interfering.  Secondly,                prohibiting rental of a squatted property by imposing a                criminal penalty upon the squatter violates the ancient                right of usufruct, that right to enjoy the fruit of the                land.  Rental income does not differ from income derived                from sale of fruit harvested from the property's trees, or                milk harvested from cows or goats or eggs from fowl on the                property, or wild game harvested  on the property. 
              
I do not                believe the Adverse Possession law in 95.18 will withstand                a constitutional challenge.  And of course, WHO will raise                that challenge when it will cost tens of thousands of                dollars to bring it to the Supreme Court of Florida?
              
In                conclusion, I believe the Legislature needs to impose more                obligations of proper care upon owners and mortgagees of                real estate, and upon the county commissions, so they                don't let property go into decline from owner abandonment.                 I believe adverse possessors don't comprise the best                alternative, but they certainly do the property more good                than abandonment.  Ideally, an owner should notify the                county of the abandonment, and the county should repair it                and rent it out,  charge the fee for repairs to the                mortgagee or deduct the fee and expenses from the rental                income, and pay the balance to the mortgagee.  
              
              
Florida                Adverse Possession Statute of Limitations (not under color                of title)
              
          95.18 Real                property actions; adverse possession without color of                title.—               UNDER                      PENALTY OF PERJURY, I DECLARE THAT I HAVE READ THE                      FOREGOING RETURN AND THAT THE FACTS STATED IN IT ARE                      TRUE AND CORRECT. I FURTHER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT THE                      RETURN DOES NOT CREATE ANY INTEREST ENFORCEABLE BY                      LAW IN THE DESCRIBED PROPERTY. THIS                      RETURN DOES NOT CREATE ANY INTEREST ENFORCEABLE BY                      LAW IN THE DESCRIBED PROPERTY. The                      property appraiser shall refuse to accept a return                      if it does not comply with this subsection. The                      executive director of the Department of Revenue is                      authorized, and all conditions are deemed met, to                      adopt emergency rules under ss. 120.536(1)                      and 120.54(4)                      for the purpose of implementing this subsection. The                      emergency rules shall remain in effect for 6 months                      after adoption and may be renewed during the                      pendency of procedures to adopt rules addressing the                      subject of the emergency rules.                  
                                
                                
                                
              
                                    (a) If a person                      makes a claim of adverse possession under this                      section against a portion of a parcel of property                      identified by a unique parcel identification number                      in the property appraiser’s records:                    
                                      
                    
                                    (a) If a person                      makes a claim of adverse possession under this                      section against property to which the property                      appraiser has not assigned a parcel identification                      number:                    
                                      
                                            
                                      
              
Candler v Watch Omega
CANDLER HOLDINGS LIMITED I, Appellant,
          v.
          WATCH OMEGA HOLDINGS, L.P., Appellee.
      District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
1232*1232 William J. Haley of Brannon Brown Haley Robinson, Lake City, and Jack W. Shaw, Jr., Orlando, for Appellant.
Dawn Giebler-Millner of Greenberg Traurig, P.A., Orlando, Elliott H. Scherker and Julissa Rodriguez of Greenberg Traurig, P.A., Miami, for Appellee.
PER CURIAM.
Candler Holdings Limited I (Candler Holdings) appeals a final summary judgment granted to Watch Omega Holdings, L.P. (Watch Omega) on Watch Omega's claim of adverse possession with respect to a parcel of real property in Leon County which vested title to that property in Watch Omega. We reverse because the record evidence does not meet the requirements of section 95.18, Florida Statutes (2003),[1]governing adverse possession without color of title.
1233*1233 In 1988, Candler Holdings owned the Lafayette Place Shopping Center in Leon County. As part of that development, a retention pond was created for storm water drainage. In connection with a loan to Candler Holdings from General Electric Capital Corporation (GE), Candler Holdings granted GE a mortgage on the shopping center property and several other unrelated parcels. The parcel of land on which the retention pond was located, however, was not included within the legal description of the mortgaged property. When that mortgage was foreclosed, GE assigned its interest to Watch Omega's predecessor in title, CJU, Ltd. (CJU). In 1998, CJU transferred that interest to Watch Omega. In 2003, when title work was being performed on Watch Omega's property, the parties first learned that the record title to the parcel of land on which the retention pond is located remained in the name of Candler Holdings. Until that time, the parties were under the mistaken impression that the legal description of the retention pond parcel had been included in the mortgaged property.
Upon learning that it had legal title to the retention pond, Candler Holdings asserted an interest in the property. Watch Omega responded by filing a two-count complaint for adverse possession and reformation of mortgage and deed.[2] The complaint sets forth a legal description for the retention pond parcel.[3] Watch Omega alleges that on its ad valorem tax returns the legal description of the retention pond was included within the legal description of the Lafayette Place Shopping Center. Those returns, however, were neither appended to the complaint nor introduced into evidence below; and are not contained in this record.
In support of its motion for summary judgment, Watch Omega filed the affidavits of representatives of CJU and Watch Omega. Both assert that a review of Leon County's tax rolls indicate that the retention pond was treated as part of the Lafayette Place Shopping Center. No public records are appended to either affidavit and no public records were introduced into evidence below by Watch Omega. In his affidavit in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, the principal of Candler Holdings, Asa G. Candler, disputes Watch Omega's contention, stating that the Lafayette Place Shopping Center and the retention pond are two separate parcels for tax purposes. In his earlier deposition, Candler had testified that his son had talked to someone in the Leon County Tax Assessor's Office and was told that, because the parcel containing the retention pond was so small, no tax bill had been sent regarding that parcel. Candler Holdings did not introduce any public records in support of Candler's statements.
At the summary judgment hearing, Candler argued that, to obtain relief pursuant to section 95.18, it was Watch Omega's affirmative duty to prove it had filed "a return of the property by proper legal description to the property appraiser of [Leon County] within one year after entering into possession and . . . subsequently 1234*1234 paid all taxes . . . levied against the property . . ." as required by section 95.18(1). Even though the record does not contain evidence of such a return,[4] or the form DR-452, Florida Administrative Code Rule 12D-16.002, mentioned in Manin v. Milander, 452 So.2d 997 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984), the trial court entered final summary judgment in favor of Watch Omega, relying upon Candler's deposition testimony that he had not paid taxes on the property containing the retention pond and rejecting his affidavit on the grounds that it constituted hearsay.
As stated in Meyer v. Law, 287 So.2d 37, 40-41 (Fla.1973):
In Florida, there are only two ways to acquire land by adverse possession. First, without color of title, the claimant must show seven years of open, continuous, actual possession, hostile to all who would challenge such possession, must both pay all taxes for the seven year period, returning said land for taxes during the first year of occupation, and enclose or cultivate said lands for the seven year period. Second, with color of title, the claimant must show he entered into possession of the premises under a claim based upon a written instrument of conveyance of the premises in question, or deed, or judgment of a competent court, and there has been a continued occupation and possession of the premises . . .
* * *
Public policy and stability of our society, . . ., requires strict compliance with the appropriate statutes by those seeking ownership throughadverse possession.
Under either section 95.16[5] or section 95.18, Florida Statutes (2003) "the possession of the real property by the one asserting the right must be continuous, adverse, and exclusive of any other right." Mullins v. Colbert, 898 So.2d 1149, 1151 (Fla. 5th DCA 2005). As we explained in Turner v. Wheeler, 498 So.2d 1039, 1042 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986):
Adverse possession is not favored and all doubts are resolved in favor of the owner. It is essential to a finding of adverse possession that the possessor's use not be permissive. Actual use is presumed permissive and the user has the burden to demonstrate that his use was without permission. Permissive use can become adverse, but only upon clear, positive and distinct notification of the owner by the permissive user that he is claiming the property other than by permission.
(Citations omitted). "Each essential element of an adverse possession claim must be proven by clear and convincing evidence." Bailey v. Hagler, 575 So.2d 679, 681 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991). (Citations omitted). "The claim cannot be `established by loose, uncertain testimony which necessitates resort to mere conjecture.'" Grant v. Strickland, 385 So.2d 1123, 1125 (Fla. 1st DCA 1980)(quoting Downing v. Bird, 100 So.2d 57, 64 (Fla.1958)). In addition, "[t]o establish adverse possession without color of title, the claimant must show . . . payment of all taxes by proper legal description for the statutory period." McLemore 1235*1235 v. McLemore, 675 So.2d 202, 206 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996).
The requirements of the statute and the case law were not met in this case. As the movant for summary judgment, Watch Omega bore a heavy burden, see Cox v. CSX Intermodal, Inc., 732 So.2d 1092, 1095 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999), and was required to prove "a negative . . . the nonexistence of a genuine issue of material fact," Holl v. Talcott, 191 So.2d 40, 43 (Fla.1966), before "it becomes necessary to determine the legal sufficiency of the affidavits or other evidence submitted by the party moved against." Id. Watch Omega's reliance solely on the bare affidavits of representatives of it and CJU was clearly insufficient to meet its heavy burden. The affiants' review of the public records and assertion that the appropriate taxes had been paid on the disputed property, by itself, was insufficient to establish adverse possession here.Zoda v. Hedden, 596 So.2d 1225, 1226 (Fla. 2d DCA 1992)(unauthenticated documents referred to in the affidavit of appellee's counsel, Walter E. Smith, which were not attached to his affidavit, constituted incompetent hearsay not sufficient to support summary judgment). "[A] corporate officer's affidavit which merely states conclusions or opinion [is insufficient] even if it is based on personal knowledge."Alvarez v. Florida Ins. Guar. Ass'n, 661 So.2d 1230, 1232 n. 2 (Fla. 3d DCA 1995)(citing Nour v. All State Pipe Supply Co., 487 So.2d 1204, 1205 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986)).
REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BARFIELD, VAN NORTWICK, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
[1] Section 95.18, which has remained substantively the same throughout the period of the parties' transactions, with one very minor technical change, see chapter 95-147, § 523, at 394, Laws of Florida, provides:
(1) When the occupant or those under whom the occupant claims have been in actual continued occupation of real property for 7 years under a claim of title exclusive of any other right, but not founded on a written instrument, judgment, or decree, the property actually occupied shall be held adversely if the person claiming adverse possession made a return of the property by proper legal description to the property appraiser of the county where it is located within 1 year after entering into possession and has subsequently paid all taxes and matured installments of special improvement liens levied against the property by the state, county, and municipality.
(2) For the purpose of this section, property shall be deemed to be possessed in the following cases only:
(a) When it has been protected by substantial enclosure.
(b) When it has been usually cultivated or improved.
[2] The count seeking reformation is not before us.
[3] We note that the legal description in the complaint is not identical to the legal description contained within the final summary judgment.
[4] See Forman v. Ward, 219 So.2d 68, 69 (Fla. 1st DCA 1969)(suggesting that compliance with this requirement of section 95.18 may be achieved by delivering a return based upon a legal description "having reference to a book and page number in the records of the circuit court clerk where a recorded deed may be found.").
[5] Section 95.16, Florida Statutes (2003), addressing adverse possession under color of title, has not been invoked in this case.