Opinion
No. 72-922.
February 13, 1974.
Appeal from the Circuit Court, Lee County, Thomas W. Shands, J.
Wm. K. Chester and L. Joseph Hoffman of the Law Offices of Alfred Aronovitz, Miami, for appellant.
William A. Keyes, Jr., of the Law Offices of Stewart, Stewart Jackson, Fort Myers, for appellees.
Appellant sought a tax exemption from 1971 taxes for a portion of its lands used as a licensed non-profit old folks' home. The exemption was denied and this action followed. The trial judge granted with prejudice a motion to dismiss appellant's second amended complaint. We reverse.
Appellant filed an application for the aforesaid tax exemption well before April 1, 1971 as required by Ch. 196, F.S. 1969, F.S.A. However, § 196.191(14) thereof prescribed that certain information "shall" be filed with the application. Especially, paragraph (b) of said subsection requires that non-profit corporations deliver certain financial information with the application. Concededly, this was not done in this case. Additionally, pursuant to the aforesaid paragraph (b), the tax assessor may request such additional information as he may be advised. He did so here; but no express request was made for the financial information required by paragraph (b). Rather, it appears, information was requested, and indeed promptly given, relating to paragraph ( c) of the aforesaid § 196.191(14) which requires different information.
This section has since been repealed by Ch. 71-133, Laws of Fla. 1971.
In any case, the tax assessor thereafter denied the exemption by notice given on May 4, 1971, and a subsequent diligent appeal to the County Tax Adjustment Board suffered a like fate. We point out too, incidentally, that the financial information required by the aforesaid paragraph (b) was neither requested nor given in the proceeding before the Board. In fact, the required financial information nowhere appears in the record of this matter until the filing of the second amended complaint in this case, i.e., the one before us here, to which it is attached as an exhibit.
Now, in dismissing the second amended complaint the trial judge based his order solely on the holding that "Section 196.191(14)(b) 1, Florida Statutes, is mandatory . . .", thereby apparently concluding that timeliness was of the essence. It thus appears the sole question we must decide is whether appellant, having failed timely to furnish the financial information required by paragraph (b) of § 196.191(14), F.S. 1969, F.S.A., has forfeited or waived his right to claim tax exemption for the taxable year 1971. We think not.
This court held in Jasper v. St. Petersburg Episcopal Community, Inc., a case similar to this one, that the April 1 deadline for claiming a tax exemption was not absolute in all cases. That is to say, a late filing under certain circumstances not amounting to laches on the part of the applicant could be excused and no forfeiture of such exemption would result. We relied principally in that case on Gamma Phi Chapter of Sigma Chi Building Fund Corporation v. Dade County in which our Supreme Court held that the statute, requiring the timely filing of an application for an exemption, is "purely administrative" and is calculated primarily to produce the orderly and efficient preparation of the tax roll which must be completed by July 1 in each year. The necessary implication of Gamma Phi is that the April 1 deadline, even for filing the application, is not absolute; although, under the facts therein, the court affirmed the denial of the exemption because the applicant was clearly guilty of laches in not applying for exemption, though requested to do so by the tax assessor, until 23 days before the assessor was obliged to complete the tax roll.
(Fla.App.2d 1969), 222 So.2d 479.
See, § 192.062, F.S. 1967, changed to § 196.011, Ch. 69-55, Laws of Fla. 1969.
(Fla. 1967), 199 So.2d 717.
See, § 193.381, F.S. 1969.
While neither of the foregoing cases is precisely on point the rationale apparent therein nevertheless persuades us that the mere failure to comply with paragraph (b) of 196.191(14) on or before April 1 of the taxable year, particularly, we think, when the application itself is timely as here, is not of itself fatal to entitlement to the exemption. That is to say, that that section is not mandatory as to timeliness in default of which the exemption is irrevocably lost. All facts and circumstances ought be considered to determine whether the applicant was guilty of laches or is in some other way estopped from denying an operative waiver of the exemption. The trial court, in granting the motion to dismiss, did not reach that point. We think he should have.
In view whereof, the final order appealed from should be, and it is hereby, reversed; and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.
MANN, C.J., concurs.
BOARDMAN, J., dissents with opinion.
I respectfully dissent.
The majority opinion relies, to a great extent, on Jasper v. St. Petersburg Episcopal Community, Inc., Fla.App.2d 1969, 222 So.2d 479. The issue in Jasper, supra, was whether a delay in filing should result in a loss of the right to an exemption under all circumstances. The issue was resolved in the negative as, under the facts of the case, timely filing would have been futile in the face of an announced intention to deny any claimed exemption. This court concluded its opinion by stating that ". . . [u]nder such circumstances, there could be no significance in observing to the letter the filing date for making any claim." The facts of the instant case are clearly distinguishable and the law enunciated in Jasper is inapplicable.
This court held in United Bonding Insurance Company v. Tuggle, Fla.App.2d 1968, 216 So.2d 80:
. . . [t]he legislature must be assumed to have intended the plain meaning of its words, and the word "shall" when given its ordinary meaning has a mandatory rather than a permissive connotation. . . . (page 81).
It is undisputed here that the information required by Section 196.191(14)(b), Florida Statutes, F.S.A., was not timely provided. Accordingly the appellant's non-compliance with the requirement of this statute constituted a waiver.
Tax exemptions are in the nature of special privileges and should be strictly construed against the claimant and in favor of the taxing power. See State v. Inter-American Center Authority, Fla. 1955, 84 So.2d 9.
I would affirm.