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City of Miami v. 346 NW 29th St., LLC
Victoria Méndez, City Attorney, and Henry J. Hunnefeld, Sr., Senior Assistant City Attorney, and Kerri L. McNulty and Joseph A. Ruiz, Assistant City Attorneys, for petitioner.
Pardo Jackson Gainsburg, Stevan J. Pardo and Nicole R. Rekant, for respondents.
Before LAGOA, SALTER and EMAS, JJ.
The City of Miami filed a petition, seeking a writ of prohibition quashing the circuit court's partial summary judgment on liability in favor of the Plaintiff class, 346 N.W. 29th Street, LLC, d/b/a Museo Vault and others ("the Class"). In its petition, the City contends that the trial court acted in excess of its jurisdiction by granting the Class' motion, and offers various arguments in support of this contention. We conclude that these issues are either without merit or are not cognizable by prohibition.1 Accordingly, we deny the City's petition but write to address the City's principal argument: that the Class claims were barred by the sixty-day jurisdictional non-claim statute (§ 194.171(2), Fla. Stat.), thus depriving the trial court of jurisdiction over this action.
Pursuant to a 2001 referendum, City of Miami voters approved a proposal to permit certain new and expanding businesses located within the City to apply for an ad valorem tax exemption. In 2002, the City enacted sections 56–110 through 56–122 of the City of Miami Code, an ordinance entitled "Ad Valorem Tax Exemption for Enterprise Zone Businesses." The purpose of the ordinance was to revitalize and rehabilitate distressed areas identified as "enterprise zones" within the City. The ordinance provided specific qualifying requirements as well as procedures for submitting an application, review and approval (or denial) of an application, and appeal from a denial of an application. If approved, the tax exemption was for a term of one year, and could be renewed annually thereafter for a maximum of ten years. See generally Miami, Fla., Code art. V, §§ 56–112 through 56–122 (2002).
In 2013, the Class representative filed a two-count complaint against the City and others, alleging that the City failed to review and approve (or deny) applications submitted pursuant to the City ordinance. Between 2004 and 2011, approximately sixty-seven businesses, each purportedly within the Miami Enterprise Zones, filed applications with the City, seeking approval of an ad valorem tax exemption. It is undisputed that, during the relevant time period, no applicant in this case received written approval of an ad valorem tax exemption pursuant to the City ordinance. It is also undisputed that, during the same relevant time period, no applicant received a written denial of their application.
The City argues that the sixty-day non-claim provision of section 194.171(2) bars the action below and deprives the trial court of jurisdiction. Section 194.171(2) provides:
No action shall be brought to contest a tax assessment after 60 days from the date the assessment being contested is certified for collection under s. 193.122(2), or after 60 days from the date a decision is rendered concerning such assessment by the value adjustment board if a petition contesting the assessment had not received final action by the value adjustment board prior to extension of the roll under s. 197.323.
Section 194.171(6) provides that the "requirements of subsection [ ] (2) ... are jurisdictional" and that "[n]o court shall have jurisdiction in such cases until after the requirements of [ ] subsection[ ] (2) ... have been met."
While we are doubtful that section 194.171(2) applies to the instant case, we need not decide that issue.2 Even if section 194.171(2) does apply, the City's position is nevertheless unavailing, because the City did not provide any Class member with a notice of denial of tax exemption in accordance with state law or in compliance with the City's own ordinance. Section 196.193(5), Florida Statutes, which is part of the same statutory framework encompassing section 194.171, provides:
(Emphasis added.)
It is undisputed that the City did not provide notice in compliance with section 196.193(5). Further, the City failed to comply with its own ordinance in reviewing and determining the Class members' applications for ad valorem tax exemptions. Section 56–116 of the City of Miami Code provides:
All applications shall be reviewed by the Department [of Economic Development] which shall transmit its findings to the city manager, who shall either recommend approval to the city commission or decline to recommend approval.
The ordinance further provides:
Miami, Fla., Code art. V, § 56–117 (2002) (emphasis added).
As set forth above, the City ordinance provides a mechanism for appeal from a denial of an application, but the timeframe within which to appeal (thirty days) commences on "the date applicant was notified of denial" by the City's Department of Economic Opportunity. Id. That notification of denial never occurred. Further,...
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