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Florida's CFO seeks to scuttle fight over unclaimed property

Tampa Bay Times via Miami Herald

Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis asked a federal judge Thursday to toss out a potential class-action lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a law that directs the state鈥檚 handling of unclaimed property.

The lawsuit, filed in July in Tallahassee, alleges that the state does not provide 鈥渏ust compensation,鈥 such as interest, to owners who ultimately claim property. It contends that the system results in an unconstitutional 鈥渢aking鈥 of property.

But attorneys for Patronis filed a motion and a lengthy legal memorandum Thursday urging U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle to dismiss the case. Patronis oversees the unclaimed-property program, which involves people鈥檚 property that has been held by such things as banks and insurance companies.

When the property is believed to be unclaimed, it is turned over to the state. Examples are money, unclaimed insurance proceeds and items in safe-deposit boxes.

Unclaimed money is deposited into what is known as the State School Trust Fund, which helps support public schools. The state also periodically holds auctions of unclaimed items. If owners or their heirs find out about the unclaimed property, they can recover money from the state.

The legal memorandum Thursday said while the state 鈥渉olds unclaimed property in safekeeping for the owner, it also gains beneficial use of the property (a collateral benefit) until it is reclaimed. This bears no resemblance to a traditional 鈥榯aking.鈥欌

鈥淔lorida law does not require the Department (of Financial Services) or the state to take title to unclaimed property; rather, the department acts as a custodian of such property until the time a claim is filed, processed, and the property or proceeds are returned to the owner,鈥 said the memorandum, filed by attorneys with the firm Dean, Mead & Dunbar. 鈥淭hus, although unclaimed property laws often lead to a public benefit, they are also designed to protect the rights of property owners.鈥

But the lawsuit said the unclaimed-property law 鈥渆ffectively provides the state with an interest-free loan of unclaimed private property funds that the act directs to be co-mingled with the state鈥檚 school fund while in the state鈥檚 custody. The state otherwise pays market rates to borrow money.鈥

鈥淭he state does not compensate an owner of unclaimed property for lost interest, dividends, or other earnings or accruals on the property after deposit with the state or the loss of the beneficial use of the property or its time value while it is in state custody,鈥 the lawsuit said. 鈥淪o, the state does not pay just compensation to any owner for the state鈥檚 use of their private unclaimed property while it is in state custody.鈥

The named plaintiff in the lawsuit, St. Petersburg resident Alieda Maron, has a $26.24 insurance-premium refund that is in the unclaimed-property system, according to court documents. Her attorneys contend the lawsuit should be handled as a class action.

鈥淕iven that most of the property amounts held are small, the number of persons or entities who own property presumed abandoned and held in custody by the state under the act necessarily must be in the hundreds of thousands,鈥 said the lawsuit, filed by attorneys from five firms.

But in addition to disputing that the law leads to taking of property, Patronis鈥 attorneys contend Maron does not have legal standing to pursue the case.

鈥淧laintiff鈥檚 only allegations of an actual injury are that someday in the future at some undetermined time, plaintiff may submit a claim, which the department may approve, and she will not receive interest on the $26.24 of insurance premium refunds held by the department,鈥 Thursday鈥檚 memorandum said. 鈥淭hese allegations are not imminent and amount to nothing more than the mere possibility of harm in the indeterminate future.鈥

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