Chapter 83 Landlord and Tenant
PART III - SELF-SERVICE STORAGE SPACE
Definitions.--As used in ss. 83.801-83.809:
(1) "Self-service storage facility" means any
real property designed and used for the purpose of
renting or leasing individual storage space to tenants
who are to have access to such space for the purpose of
storing and removing personal property. No individual
storage space may be used for residential purposes. A
self-service storage facility is not a
"warehouse" as that term is used in chapter
677. If an owner issues any warehouse receipt, bill of
lading, or other document of title for the personal
property stored, the owner and the tenant shall be
subject to the provisions of chapter 677, and the
provisions of this act shall not apply.
(2) "Self-contained storage unit" means any
unit not less than 600 cubic feet in size, including, but
not limited to, a trailer, box, or other shipping
container, which is leased by a tenant primarily for use
as storage space whether the unit is located at a
facility owned or operated by the owner or at another
location designated by the tenant.
(3) "Owner" means the owner, operator, lessor,
or sublessor of a self-service storage facility or
self-contained storage unit or his or her agent or any
other person authorized by him or her to manage the
facility or to receive rent from a tenant under a rental
agreement.
(4) "Tenant" means a person or the person's
sublessee, successor, or assign entitled to the use of
storage space at a self-service storage facility or in a
self-contained unit, under a rental agreement, to the
exclusion of others.
(5) "Rental agreement" means any agreement or
lease which establishes or modifies terms, conditions,
rules, or any other provisions concerning the use and
occupancy of a self-service storage facility or use of a
self-contained storage unit.
(6) "Last known address" means that address
provided by the tenant in the latest rental agreement or
the address provided by the tenant by hand delivery or
certified mail in a subsequent written notice of a change
of address.
Chap. 83, Part III, §83.803
Lien.
The owner of a self-service storage facility or
self-contained storage unit and the owner's heirs,
executors, administrators, successors, and assigns have a
lien upon all personal property, whether or not owned by
the tenant, located at a self-service storage facility or
in a self-contained storage unit for rent, labor charges,
or other charges, present or future, in relation to the
personal property and for expenses necessary for its
preservation or expenses reasonably incurred in its sale
or other disposition pursuant to ss. 83.801-83.809. The
lien provided for in this section attaches as of the date
that the personal property is brought to the self-service
storage facility or as of the date the tenant takes
possession of the self-contained storage unit, and the
priority of this lien shall be the same as provided in s.
83.08; however, in the event of default, the owner must
give notice to persons who hold perfected security
interests under the Uniform Commercial Code in which the
tenant is named as the debtor.
Chap. 83, Part III, §83.805
Withholding access to personal property upon nonpayment
of rent.
Upon the failure of a tenant to pay the rent when it
becomes due, the owner may, without notice, after 5 days
from the date the rent is due, deny the tenant access to
the personal property located in the self-service storage
facility or self-contained storage unit. In denying the
tenant access to personal property contained in the
self-contained storage unit, the owner may proceed
without judicial process, if this can be done without
breach of the peace, or may proceed by action.
Chap. 83, Part III, §83.8055
Enforcement of lien.
An owner's lien as provided in s. 83.805 may be satisfied
as follows:
(1) The tenant shall be notified by written notice
delivered in person or by certified mail to the tenant's
last known address and conspicuously posted at the
self-service storage facility or on the self-contained
storage unit.
(2) The notice shall include:
(a) An itemized statement of the owner's claim, showing
the sum due at the time of the notice and the date when
the sum became due.
(b) The same description, or a reasonably similar
description, of the personal property as provided in the
rental agreement.
(c) A demand for payment within a specified time not less
than 14 days after delivery of the notice.
(d) A conspicuous statement that, unless the claim is
paid within the time stated in the notice, the personal
property will be advertised for sale or other disposition
and will be sold or otherwise disposed of at a specified
time and place.
(e) The name, street address, and telephone number of the
owner whom the tenant may contact to respond to the
notice.
(3) Any notice given pursuant to this section shall be
presumed delivered when it is deposited with the United
States Postal Service, registered, and properly addressed
with postage prepaid.
(4) After the expiration of the time given in the notice,
an advertisement of the sale or other disposition shall
be published once a week for 2 consecutive weeks in a
newspaper of general circulation in the area where the
self-service storage facility or self-contained storage
unit is located. Inasmuch as any sale may involve
property of more than one tenant, a single advertisement
may be used to dispose of property at any one sale.
(a) The advertisement shall include:
1. A brief and general description of what is believed to
constitute the personal property contained in the storage
unit, as provided in paragraph (2)(b).
2. The address of the self-service storage facility or
the address where the self-contained storage unit is
located and the name of the tenant.
3. The time, place, and manner of the sale or other
disposition. The sale or other disposition shall take
place not sooner than 15 days after the first
publication.
(b) If there is no newspaper of general circulation in
the area where the self-service storage facility or
self-contained storage unit is located, the advertisement
shall be posted at least 10 days before the date of the
sale or other disposition in not fewer than three
conspicuous places in the neighborhood where the
self-service storage facility or self-contained storage
unit is located.
(5) Any sale or other disposition of the personal
property shall conform to the terms of the notification
as provided for in this section and shall be conducted in
a commercially reasonable manner, as that term is used in
s. 679.504(3).
(6) Before any sale or other disposition of personal
property pursuant to this section, the tenant may pay the
amount necessary to satisfy the lien and the reasonable
expenses incurred under this section and thereby redeem
the personal property. Upon receipt of such payment, the
owner shall return the property to the tenant and
thereafter shall have no liability to any person with
respect to such personal property. If the tenant fails to
redeem the personal property or satisfy the lien,
including reasonable expenses, he or she will be deemed
to have unjustifiably abandoned the self-service storage
facility or self-contained storage unit, and the owner
may resume possession of the premises for himself or
herself.
(7) A purchaser in good faith of the personal property
sold to satisfy a lien provided for in s. 83.805 takes
the property free of any claims, except those interests
provided for in s. 83.808, despite noncompliance by the
owner with the requirements of this section.
(8) In the event of a sale under this section, the owner
may satisfy his or her lien from the proceeds of the
sale, provided the owner's lien has priority over all
other liens in the personal property. The lien rights of
secured lienholders are automatically transferred to the
remaining proceeds of the sale. The balance, if any,
shall be held by the owner for delivery on demand to the
tenant. A notice of any balance shall be delivered by the
owner to the tenant in person or by certified mail to the
last known address of the tenant. If the tenant does not
claim the balance of the proceeds within 2 years of the
date of sale, the proceeds shall be deemed abandoned, and
the owner shall have no further obligation with regard to
the payment of the balance. In the event that the owner's
lien does not have priority over all other liens, the
sale proceeds shall be held for the benefit of the
holders of those liens having priority. A notice of the
amount of the sale proceeds shall be delivered by the
owner to the tenant or secured lienholders in person or
by certified mail to their last known addresses. If the
tenant or the secured lienholders do not claim the sale
proceeds within 2 years of the date of sale, the proceeds
shall be deemed abandoned, and the owner shall have no
further obligation with regard to the payment of the
proceeds.
Chap. 83, Part III, §83.806
Contractual liens.
Nothing in ss. 83.801-83.809 shall be construed as in any
manner impairing or affecting the right of parties to
create liens by special contract or agreement nor shall
it in any manner impair or affect any other lien arising
at common law, in equity, or by any statute of this state
or any other lien not provided for in s. 83.805.
Chap. 83, Part III, §83.808
Application of act.
(1) Nothing in this act shall be construed as in any
manner impairing or affecting the right of parties to
create additional rights, duties, and obligations in and
by virtue of a rental agreement. The provisions of ss.
83.801-83.809 shall be in addition to all other rights
allowed by law in a creditor-debtor or landlord-tenant
relationship.
(2) Chapter 82-151, Law of Florida, shall apply to all
rental agreements entered into, extended, or renewed
after July 1, 1982.
Florida RESIDENT IN-TRANSIT AND PERSONAL PROPERTY INSURANCE AGENT
2-31 In-Transit and Personal Property Insurance
Florida Statutes 626.321 (1) (i) defines "IN-TRANSIT AND PERSONAL PROPERTY INSURANCE" as insurance of personal property not held for resale, covering the risks of transportation or storage in rented or leased motor vehicles, trailers, or self-service storage facilities. The license is issued to employees or authorized representatives of lessors who rent or lease motor vehicles, trailers, or self-service storage facilities and who are authorized by an insurer to issue certificates or other evidences of insurance to lessees of such motor vehicles, trailers, or self-service storage facilities under an insurance policy issued to the lessor.
Application Qualifications:
Complete an online application for License and submit appropriate fees.
Be a natural person at least 18 years of age.
Be a bona fide resident of the state of Florida.
Be a United States citizen or legal alien who possesses a work authorization from the United States Immigration and Naturalization Services.
Be fingerprinted by the County School Board, via livescan process.
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This information is provided for informational purposes
only. Please seek legal counsel for help on
interpretation of individual statutes.
Contact Ron VanVarden
Member
Self Storage Association
California Self Storage Association (Central Valley Territory Leader)