The Florida Senate
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.)
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Fiscal Policy
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1140
INTRODUCER: Fiscal Policy Committee; Regulated Industries Committee and Senator Burton
SUBJECT: Mobile Homes
DATE: February 19, 2024 REVISED:
ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR REFERENCE ACTION
1. Oxamendi Imhof RI Fav/CS
2. Oxamendi Yeatman FP Fav/CS
Please see Section IX. for Additional Information:
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE - Substantial Changes
I. Summary:
CS/CS/SB 1140 revises provisions in ch. 723, F.S., relating to mobile homes. The bill allows
park owners and homeowners in a dispute related to lot rental increases to select a mediator and
initiate mediation proceedings before submitting a petition for mediation with the Division of
Condominiums, Timeshares, and Mobile Homes (division). The mediator selected by the parties
must be a qualified mediator selected from the list of circuit court mediators in each judicial
circuit or the list maintained by the Florida Growth Management Conflict Resolution
Consortium. It is not clear under current law that the homeowners and the park owner may agree
on a mediator before submitting a petition for mediation with the division, as provided in the bill.
Under the bill, a civil action may not be initiated unless the dispute has been submitted to
mediation pursuant to s. 723.037(5), F.S., which provides the process for mediating certain
mobile home park disputes, including a dispute related to a rent increase. Current law permits a
civil action after mediation of a dispute has failed to resolve a dispute, but does not explicitly bar
the initiation of a civil action if the dispute is not submitted for mediation pursuant to
s. 723.037(5), F.S. The bill allows homeowners, after the majority of the affected home owners
have agreed in writing to file an action, to file an action in circuit court if the responding party
park owner refuses or fails to participate in mediation. Current law provides that either party may
file an action in circuit court if the mediation failed to provide a resolution to the dispute.
The bill provides that a mobile home owner’s live-in health care aide or assistant be allowed to
enter or leave the home owner's site without that person being required to pay additional rent, a
fee, or any charge whatsoever. However, the mobile home owner must provide the information
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1140 Page 2
required to have the background check and pay the cost of a background check for the live-in
health care aide or assistant if one is necessary. The bill provides that a live-in health care aide or
assistant does not have any rights of tenancy in the park. The bill requires the mobile home
owner to notify the park owner or park manager of the name of the live-in health care aide or
assistant. The mobile home owner is also responsible for any removal of the live-in health care
aide and any costs associated with the removal of a live-in health care aide or assistant, if
necessary.
The bill requires the division to adopt rules to implement and administer the provisions of the
bill.
The bill takes effect July 1, 2024.
II. Present Situation:
Chapter 723, F.S., the “Florida Mobile Home Act” (act) addresses the unique relationship
between a mobile home owner and a mobile home park owner.1 The provisions in ch. 723, F.S.,
apply to residential tenancies where a mobile home is placed upon a lot that is rented or leased
from a mobile home park that has 10 or more lots offered for rent or lease.2
Chapter 723.003, F.S., provides the following relevant definitions:
“Mobile home park” or “park” means a use of land in which lots or spaces are offered for
rent or lease for the placement of mobile homes and in which the primary use of the park is
residential.3
“Mobile home owner,” “mobile homeowner,” “home owner,” or “homeowner” means a
person who owns a mobile home and rents or leases a lot within a mobile home park for
residential use.4
Mobile home parks are regulated by the Division of Condominiums, Timeshares, and Mobile
Homes (division) within the Department of Business and Professional Regulation. The division
may adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54, F.S., relating to the requirements in the
Administrative Procedures Act for the adoption of rules by agencies, to implement and enforce
the provisions of ch. 723, F.S, including rules to authorize amendments to an approved
prospectus or offering circular and to establish a category of minor violations of ch. 723, F.S., or
rules promulgated pursuant hereto.5 The division may also adopt rules for mediation procedures.6
A mobile home park owner must pay to the division, on or before October 1 of each year, an
annual fee of $4 for each mobile home lot within a mobile home park which he or she owns.7 If
the fee is not paid by December 31, a penalty of 10 percent of the amount due must be assessed.
1
Section 723.004, F.S.
2
Section 723.002(1), F.S.
3
Section 723.003(12), F.S.
4
Section 723.003(11), F.S.
5
See ss. 723.006(7), (8), (9), and (10), F.S.
6
Section 723.038, F.S.
7
Section 723.007(1), F.S.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1140 Page 3
Additionally, if the fee is not paid, the park owner does not have standing to maintain or defend
any action in court until the amount due, plus any penalty, is paid.8
Additionally, there is a $1 surcharge on each annual fee. The collected surcharge must be
deposited in the Florida Mobile Home Relocation Trust Fund by the division.9
Mobile Home Park Rent Increases
A purchaser of a mobile home has the right to assume the remainder of the term of any rental
agreement in effect between the mobile home park owner and the seller.10 The purchaser is also
entitled to rely on the terms and conditions of the prospectus or offering circular as delivered to
the initial recipient.11
The mobile home park owner may increase the rental amount upon the expiration of the assumed
rental agreement “in an amount deemed appropriate by the mobile home park owner.”12 The park
owner must give affected mobile home owners and the board of directors of the homeowners’
association, if one has been formed, at least a 90-day notice of a lot rental increase.13
Upon the sale of a mobile home on a rented lot, the amount of a lot rental increase is to be
disclosed and agreed to by the purchaser by executing a rental agreement that sets forth the new
lot rental amount.14 A lot rental amount may not be increased during the term of a rental
agreement. However, if the rental agreement is for a term of more than 12 months, the lot rental
amount may be increased during the rental term but not more frequently than annually. Pass-
through charges15 may also be increased during the term of the rental agreement.16
Lot rental increases may not be arbitrary or discriminatory between similarly situated tenants in
the park, and the lot rental may not increase during the term of the rental agreement.17 However,
the mobile home park owner may pass on, at any time during the term of the rental agreement, ad
valorem property taxes and utility charges, or increases of either, if the passing on of these costs
was disclosed prior to the tenancy.18
A park owner is deemed to have disclosed the passing on of ad valorem property taxes and non-
ad valorem assessments if ad valorem property taxes or non-ad valorem assessments were
8
Id.
9
Section 723.007(2), F.S.
10
Section 723.059(3), F.S.
11
Id.
12
Section 723.059(4), F.S.
13
Section 723.037(1), F.S.
14
Section 723.031(5), F.S.
15
Section 723.003(17), F.S, defines the term “pass-through charge” to mean “the mobile home owner's proportionate share of
the necessary and actual direct costs and impact or hookup fees for a governmentally mandated capital improvement, which
may include the necessary and actual direct costs and impact or hookup fees incurred for capital improvements required for
public or private regulated utilities.”
16
Section 723.031(5)(b), F.S.
17
Section 723.031(5), F.S.
18
Section 723.031(5)(c), F.S.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1140 Page 4
disclosed as a factor for increasing the lot rental amount in the prospectus19 or rental
agreement.20
A park owner must give written notice to each affected mobile home owner and the board of
directors of the homeowners’ association, if one has been formed, at least 90 days before any
increase in the lot rental amount or reduction in services or utilities provided by the park owner
or change in rules and regulations. 21 The notice must identify all other affected homeowners,
which may be by lot number, name, group, or phase. If the affected homeowners are not
identified by name, the park owner must make the names and addresses available upon request.22
Dispute Resolution
A committee of homeowners and the park owner must meet no later than 60 days before the
effective date of a rent increase to discuss the reasons for the increase. The homeowners’
committee may consist of no more than five people, who are mobile homeowners in the park and
who are designated by a majority of the owners or by the board of directors of the homeowners’
association if formed as provided under s. 723.075, F.S.23 At the meeting, the park owner or
subdivision developer must in good faith disclose and explain all material factors resulting in the
decision to increase the lot rental amount, reduce services or utilities, or change rules and
regulations, including how those factors justify the specific change proposed.24
If the meeting does not resolve the issue, then additional meetings may be requested. If
subsequent meetings are unsuccessful, within 30 days of the last scheduled meeting, the mobile
home owners may petition the division to initiate mediation if a majority of the affected have
designated, in writing, that:25
The rental increase is unreasonable;
The rental increase has made the lot rental amount unreasonable;
The decrease in services or utilities is not accompanied by a corresponding decrease in rent
or is otherwise unreasonable; or
The change in the rules and regulations is unreasonable.
Within 30 days of the last scheduled meeting, a park owner may also petition the division for
mediation of the dispute.26
If the mediation does not successfully resolve the dispute, then the parties may file an action in
circuit court to challenge the rental increase.27 The court may refer the action to nonbinding
arbitration pursuant to s. 44.103, F.S.
19
Before the rental of a mobile home lot, s. 723.011, F.S., requires the park owner of a mobile home park containing 26 or
more lots to file a prospectus with the division. The prospectus must include written disclosers to prospective renters, as
specified in s. 723.012, F.S.
20
Id.
21
Section 723.037(1), F.S.
22
Id.
23
Section 723.037(4)(a), F.S.
24
Section 723.037(4)(b), F.S.
25
Section 723.037(5)(a), F.S.
26
Section 723.037(5)(b), F.S.
27
Sections 723.038 and 723.0381, F.S.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1140 Page 5
Section 723.038, F.S., provides that, upon receipt of the petition from either party, the division
must appoint a qualified mediator to conduct mediation proceedings unless the parties timely
notify the division in writing that they have selected a mediator. The person appointed by the
division to serve as mediator must be a qualified mediator from a list of circuit court mediators in
each judicial circuit and who has met training and educational requirements established by the
Supreme Court. If such mediators are not available, the division may select a mediator from the
list maintained by the Florida Growth Management Conflict Resolution Consortium.28 The
division must promulgate rules of procedure to govern such proceedings in accordance with the
rules of practice and procedure adopted by the Supreme Court.29 The division must also
establish, by rule, the fee to be charged by a mediator which shall not exceed the fee authorized
by the circuit court.30
The division has adopted by rule separate petitions for mediation for filing by the homeowners
and the park owner.31
Within 20 days of receiving a petition to mediate a dispute, the division must notify the parties
that a mediator has been appointed by the division. The parties may accept the mediator
appointed by the division or, within 30 days, select a mediator to mediate the dispute.32
Each party to the mediation must pay a $250 filing fee to the mediator appointed by the division
or selected by the parties, within 30 days after the division notifies the parties of the appointment
of the mediator. The $250 filing fee must be used by the mediator to defray the hourly rate
charged for mediation of the dispute. Any portion of the filing fee not used must be refunded to
the parties.33
The parties may agree to select their own mediator to be governed by the rules of procedure
established by the division. The parties may agree to waive mediation, or the petitioning party
may withdraw the petition prior to mediation.34
The resolution of a dispute arising from a mediation may not be deemed to be final agency
action. However, either party may initiate an action in the circuit court to enforce a resolution or
agreement arising from a mediation proceeding which has been reduced to writing. The circuit
court must consider such resolution or agreement made during the mediation to be a contract for
the purpose of providing a remedy to the complaining party.35
28
Section 1004.59, F.S., establishes the Florida Conflict Resolution Consortium at Florida State University “to reduce the
public and private costs of litigation; resolve public disputes, including those related to growth management issues, more
quickly and effectively; and improve intergovernmental communications, cooperation, and consensus building.” See Florida
Conflict Resolution Consortium at https://consensus.fsu.edu/index.html (last visited Jan. 23, 2024).
29
See Fla. Admin. Code Ch. 61B-32, relating to mobile home mediation rules; and Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.720, providing for
mediation procedures.
30
See Fla. Admin. Code R. 61B-32.0056, relating to the fees for mediators and mediation. The fee amount is based on the
county or judicial circuit in which the mobile home park is located and ranges from $175 for up to two hours of mediation to
$125 per prorated hour.
31
See DBPR, Mobile Homes – Forms and Publications, available at: http://www.myfloridalicense.com/DBPR/mobile-
homes/forms-and-publications/ (last visited Jan. 24, 2024).
32
Section 723.038(4), F.S.
33
Id.
34
Section 723.038(5), F.S.
35
Section 723.038(6), F.S.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 1140 Page 6
If mediation does not resolve the dispute, either party may file an action in the circuit court.36
Invitees – Rights and Obligations
An invitee37 of a mobile home owner may enter or leave the home owner's site without the home
owner or invitee being required to pay additional rent, a fee, or any charge whatsoever. Any
mobile home park rule or regulation is null and void if it provides fees or charges to the contrary
to this right of access.38
All guests, family members, or invitees of a mobile home owner are required to abide by
properly promulgated rules and regulations.
Section 723.051(3), F.S., provides that an “invitee” is:
a person whose stay at the request of a mobile home owner does not
exceed 15 consecutive days or 30 total days per year, unless such person
has the permission of the park owner or unless permitted by a properly
promulgated rule or regulation. The spouse of a mobile home owner shall
not be considered an invitee.
III. Effect of Proposed Changes:
Dispute Resolution
The bill amends s. 723.037(5)(b), F.S., to require the mobile homeowner’s petition for mediation
must be filed with the division for a determination of adequacy and conformance with the types
of disputes that are subject to mediation in s. 723.037(5)(a), F.S. The homeowners must provide