Skip to main content
  • Call
    Contact Us

    TOLL FREE: 1-866-9-NO-SCAM

     
  • File Complaint
Logo
  • Home
  • Meet the Attorney General
    • Attorney General James Uthmeier
    • Official Photo
  • About the Office
    • Departments
      • AG Opinions
      • Antitrust
      • Civil Legal Services
      • Civil Litigation
      • Consumer Protection
      • Criminal Appeals
      • Litigation Services
      • Medicaid Fraud
      • Parental Rights
      • Solicitor General
      • Statewide Prosecution
    • Programs
      • Back the Blue
      • Be a Florida Hero
      • Consumer Alerts
      • Criminal Justice Programs
      • Military and Veterans Assistance Program
      • Seniors vs. Crime
      • Cold Case Investigations Unit
    • Services
      • Civil Rights
      • Human Trafficking Prevention and Awareness
      • Identity Theft
      • Lemon Law
      • Office of Inspector General
      • Open Government
      • Victims Services
  • Contact Us
    • Addresses & Phone Numbers
    • File A Complaint
    • General Inquiries
    • Media Contact
Logo
  • Home
  • Meet the Attorney General
    • Attorney General James Uthmeier
    • Official Photo
  • About the Office
    • Departments
      • AG Opinions
      • Antitrust
      • Civil Legal Services
      • Civil Litigation
      • Consumer Protection
      • Criminal Appeals
      • Litigation Services
      • Medicaid Fraud
      • Parental Rights
      • Solicitor General
      • Statewide Prosecution
    • Programs
      • Back the Blue
      • Be a Florida Hero
      • Consumer Alerts
      • Criminal Justice Programs
      • Military and Veterans Assistance Program
      • Seniors vs. Crime
      • Cold Case Investigations Unit
    • Services
      • Civil Rights
      • Human Trafficking Prevention and Awareness
      • Identity Theft
      • Lemon Law
      • Office of Inspector General
      • Open Government
      • Victims Services
  • Contact Us
    • Addresses & Phone Numbers
    • File A Complaint
    • General Inquiries
    • Media Contact

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. AG Opinions
  3. Enforcement Code Violations Dealt With Separately

Enforcement Code violations dealt with separately

View PDF
Number:
AGO 88-36
Issued
September 08, 1988
Subject:

Enforcement Code violations dealt with separately


Mr. W. Scott Wynn
Attorney for the City of Minneola
Post Office Box 447
Groveland, Florida 32736

RE: LOCAL GOVERNMENT CODE ENFORCEMENT BOARDS–boards not authorized to consolidate multiple properties with violations into single action, notice of violation.

Dear Mr. Wynn:

You have asked substantially the following questions:

1. May properties with different physical addresses or locations, but owned by one property owner, be aggregated into one action for a code violation pursuant to Ch. 162, F.S., by the code enforcement board?

2. If property is held jointly by two or more persons, should notification and service required by ss. 162.06 and 162.12, F.S., be achieved as to all persons owning an interest in such property?

In sum, I am of the following opinion:

1. Chapter 162, F.S., appears to contemplate that each code violation will be treated as a separate cause of action to be considered by a local government code enforcement board and does not authorize a municipality to consolidate all properties with violations owned by one person into a single action.

2. Chapter 162, F.S., requires notice to be given to the violator of a code provision. In the absence of any legislative or judicial direction otherwise, this office cannot conclude that written notice of a violation should be given to all persons owning an interest in property upon which a violation has occurred.

Chapter 162, F.S., the "Local Government Code Enforcement Boards Act," allows counties and municipalities to create quasi-judicial administrative boards as provided in Ch. 162, F.S., to enforce, "the codes and ordinances in force in counties and municipalities, where a pending or repeated violation continues to exist, including, but not limited to, occupational license, fire, building, zoning, and sign codes."[1] The "Local Government Code Enforcement Boards Act" gives the governing bodies of local governments the option of creating or abolishing by ordinance such boards having the powers and duties provided by the act. However, if a local governmental body creates a code enforcement board pursuant to Ch. 162, F.S., the governing body has no authority to enforce its codes in any manner other than as provided in that chapter.[2]

QUESTION ONE

Section 162.06, F.S., authorizes the code inspector for a local government to initiate enforcement proceedings of the various codes covered by Ch. 162, F.S. "[I]f a violation of the codes is found, the code inspector shall notify the violator and give him a reasonable time to correct the violation."[3] (e.s.) In the event the violation continues beyond the specified time for correction, the inspector must notify the code enforcement board and request a hearing.

Upon the request of the inspector, the chairman of the code enforcement board may call a hearing of the board. After the hearing, the board "shall issue findings of fact, based on evidence of record and conclusions of law, and shall issue an order affording the proper relief consistent with powers granted [in Ch. 162, F.S.] . . . ."[4]

Section 162.09, F.S., in pertinent part, provides:

"(1) An enforcement board, upon notification by the code inspector that an order of the enforcement board has not been complied with by the set time or, upon finding that the same violation has been repeated by the same violator, may order the violator to pay a fine not to exceed $250 for each day the violation continues past the date set for compliance or for each time the violation has been repeated, and a hearing shall not be necessary for issuance of the order.

* * *

(3) A certified copy of an order imposing a fine may be recorded in the public records and thereafter shall constitute a lien against the land on which the violation exists and upon any other real or personal property owned by the violator . . . ." (e.s.)

The language used in Ch. 162, F.S., indicates that a singular violation triggers the enforcement mechanism provided therein. Furthermore, in the event a violation remains uncorrected, the administrative fine and lien which may be imposed reflect a relationship between the violation and the particular property upon which the violation has occurred. In the absence of any judicial or legislative direction otherwise, therefore, it is my opinion that only one property may be the subject of a citation for a code violation and a subsequent hearing and disposition by a code enforcement board.

QUESTION TWO

Section 162.06(2), F.S., provides, in pertinent part, "if a violation of the codes is found, the code inspector shall notify the violator and give him a reasonable time to correct the violation." (e.s.) Furthermore, s. 162.12(1), F.S., states that "[a]ll notices required by this act shall be provided to the alleged violator by certified mail . . . or by leaving the notice at the violator's usual place of residence . . . ." (e.s.)

The notice of violation provisions in Ch. 162, F.S., require only that the "violator" be notified. Chapter 162, F.S., does not define "violator" for purposes of the act, nor does the use of the term limit its application to an owner or owners of a property upon which a violation occurs.

I have not found, nor have you directed my attention to, any legislative or judicial interpretation of Ch. 162, F.S., requiring the owner or owners of a property in violation of a code to be notified of the violation if such person(s) is/are not the "violator" for purposes of the act. In the absence of any such direction, this office cannot conclude that written notice of a violation should be given to all persons owning an interest in property upon which a violation has occurred.

Sincerely,

Robert A. Butterworth
Attorney General

RAB/tgh

-----------------------------------------

[1] Section 162.02, F.S.

[2] See AGO 86-10 in which this office concluded that a local government or its governing body derives no delegated authority from Ch. 162, F.S., to enforce its codes in any manner other than as provided in that chapter, and derive no home rule power from s. 2(b), Art. VIII, State Const., or s. 166.021, F.S., to regulate the code enforcement boards or to impose any duties or requirements on such boards or to otherwise regulate the statutorily prescribed enforcement procedure. See also AGO's 85-33 and 84-55.

[3] Section 162.06(2), F.S.

[4] Section 162.07(4), F.S.

Resources

  • AG Opinions
  • Annual Regulatory Plan
  • Consumer Protection
  • Doing Business with the Office
  • FAQ
  • Florida Digital Bill of Rights Annual Enforcement Report
  • Opioid Settlements
  • Statement of Agency Organization and Operation

Quick Links

  • Consumer Alerts
  • Military and Veterans Assistance Program
  • Open Government
  • Dose of Reality Florida
  • Request for Proposal for Professional Legal Services – PFAS
  • Request for Proposal for Professional Legal Services – Polychlorinated biphenyls
  • Request for Proposal for Professional Legal Services – Insulin
  • Crime Prevention Summit

 

  • Employment
  • File a Complaint
  • Human Trafficking Summit
  • Victim Services
  • Dozier Claims
  • Nicotine Dispensing Device Directory
Logo

Office of the Attorney General
State of Florida
PL-01, The Capitol
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1050

Privacy Policy | © 2025 State of Florida. All rights reserved.