Florida Statutes 713.11 – Liens for improving land in which the contracting party has no interest
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Terms Used In Florida Statutes 713.11
- Improvement: means any building, structure, construction, demolition, excavation, solid-waste removal, landscaping, or any part thereof existing, built, erected, placed, made, or done on land or other real property for its permanent benefit. See Florida Statutes 713.01
- Lien: A claim against real or personal property in satisfaction of a debt.
- Lienor: means a person who is:(a) A contractor;(b) A subcontractor;(c) A sub-subcontractor;(d) A laborer;(e) A materialman who contracts with the owner, a contractor, a subcontractor, or a sub-subcontractor; or(f) A professional lienor under…. See Florida Statutes 713.01
- materials: means performance or furnishing by the lienor or by another for him or her. See Florida Statutes 713.01
- Owner: means a person who is the owner of any legal or equitable interest in real property, which interest can be sold by legal process, and who enters into a contract for the improvement of the real property. See Florida Statutes 713.01
- Remainder: An interest in property that takes effect in the future at a specified time or after the occurrence of some event, such as the death of a life tenant.
When the person contracting for improving real property has no interest as owner in the land, no lien shall attach to the land, except as provided in s. 713.12, but if removal of such improvement from the land is practicable, the lien of a lienor shall attach to the improvement on which he or she has performed labor or services or for which he or she has furnished materials. The court, in the enforcement of such lien, may order such improvement to be separately sold and the purchaser may remove it within such reasonable time as the court may fix. The purchase price for such improvement shall be paid into court. The owner of the land upon which the improvement was made may demand that the land be restored substantially to its condition before the improvement was commenced, in which case the court shall order its restoration and the reasonable charge therefor shall be first paid out of such purchase price and the remainder shall be paid to lienors and other encumbrancers in accordance with their respective rights.