(1) SALE OF SEIZED TANGIBLE PERSONAL PROPERTY. After the sale of personal property, the tax collector must distribute the proceeds in this order:

Terms Used In Florida Regulations 12D-13.0055

  • Deed: The legal instrument used to transfer title in real property from one person to another.
  • Lien: A claim against real or personal property in satisfaction of a debt.
  • Personal property: All property that is not real property.
    (a) All expenses, fees and costs of selling the property must be paid.
    (b)1. If the remaining funds are sufficient to pay the delinquent taxes and interest, the tax collector must distribute the appropriate proportion of the taxes and interest collected to each taxing authority.
    2. If the remaining funds are not sufficient to pay the delinquent taxes and interest in full, the tax collector must distribute the appropriate proportion of the taxes and interest collected to each taxing authority and the deficit will be a general lien against all other personal property owned by the taxpayer.
    (c) Any surplus proceeds from the sale must be returned to the property owner or the person who had possession at the time the property was seized.
    (2) SALE OR REDEMPTION OF TAX CERTIFICATES; PROCEEDS FROM TAX DEED SALES.
    (a)1.a. When a tax certificate not held by the county has been redeemed, in whole or in part, the tax collector must pay the certificate holder the whole or proportional amount of the certificate face amount plus accrued interest at the bid rate from the date of issuance to the date of redemption. If the accrued interest is less than five percent of the face amount of the certificate, the tax collector must pay the certificate holder a mandatory minimum interest of five percent of the face amount of the certificate.
    b. Unclaimed redemption funds must be remitted to the state as provided in sections 197.473, 717.113, and 717.117, F.S.
    2.a. When tax certificates held by the county are purchased by an individual or redeemed in whole or in part, the tax collector must distribute the tax and interest to the various taxing authorities.
    b. When a taxing authority has been abolished, the share it would have received should pass as directed by law. If the law contains no direction, the tax collector must distribute the abolished taxing authority’s share on a pro rata basis to the taxing authorities in existence at the time of purchase or redemption.
    c. Taxing authorities not in existence when the taxes were levied are not entitled to share in the proceeds.
    (b) Proceeds from tax deed sales must be distributed as provided in Florida Statutes § 197.582
Rulemaking Authority Florida Statutes § 195.027(1), 213.06(1) FS. Law Implemented 197.374, 197.383, 197.472, 197.473, 197.582, 717.113, 717.117 FS. History—New 4-5-16.