Key Takeaways
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Condominium
associations have long had the power to adopt reasonable
rules and regulations in order to govern their unit owners
in an orderly fashion. However, a new ruling from a Florida
court threatens to upend one long-standing type of such a
rule, with implications for the tens of thousands of
condominium associations in the state.
For more than 35 years, condominium associations have had
this express authority to adopt rules placing reasonable
restrictions on official records requests by unit owners. In
relevant part, s. 718.111(12)(c)1., Florida Statutes,
declares that the official records of condominium
associations are open to inspection by condominium
association members and their authorized representatives at
all reasonable times. A rebuttable presumption that an
association has willfully failed to comply with the statute
is created if the condominium association does not provide
records to a requesting member within 10 working days after
receipt of the member’s written request. See Fla. Stat. §
718.111(12)(c)1. However, condominium associations are
allowed to “adopt reasonable rules regarding the frequency,
time, location, notice, and manner of record inspections.”
Id.
Until recently, rules and regulations providing that a unit
owner could not request official records more frequently
than once per month had long been considered a reasonable
restriction. Most requests for official records center
around seeking information about an association’s
expenditures, cash flow or financial health, and many
financial and accounting institutions only release new
statements on a monthly basis. In addition, frequent and
repeated requests for information can interfere with an
association’s day-to-day operations. Rules are often
necessary to deter frivolous requests by members intending
to drain the association’s resources or misuse the
information collected. Thus, it was always presumed that a
once-per-month restriction was reasonable and would hold up
to judicial scrutiny.
However, in the case of Newth Gardens Condominium
Association, Inc. v. Ruiz de Gamboa, a Palm Beach County
judge struck down an association’s prohibition on a unit
owner seeking official records from the association more
frequently than once per month.
Specifically, in Newth Gardens, a unit owner who frequently
requested records from his condominium association sued the
association for what he believed to be an untimely and
insufficient response to several records requests. For one
of the requests, the association raised as a defense that
the request was barred because it was made less than one
month after the unit owner’s prior request, and the
association had promulgated a rule that prohibited repeated
requests from the same unit owner with such frequency. In
ruling against the association, the trial judge wrote:
[T]he Court finds that to the extent that Association
promulgated a rule limiting the number of requests to one
per month, such a rule is not enforceable because it is so
restrictive that it substantially erodes the unit owner’s
right to access. The Association’s rule makes no distinction
between a request that may take minutes to fulfill and one
that may take much longer. There is no evidence or proof
that Defendant’s requests were overly burdensome or unduly
taxed the resources of the Association.
Newth Gardens Condominium Association, Inc. v. Ruiz de
Gamboa, Case No. 50-2019-CA-9347-XXXX-MB (15th
Jud. Cir. Ct. Nov. 1, 2023) (internal marks omitted). The
association appealed the ruling and argued on appeal that
the trial court was incorrect, that the once-per-month limit
was both reasonable and widely adopted, and that such a rule
did not unduly erode the right to access. In a recently
issued opinion that provides no analysis, the Fourth
District Court of Appeal (DCA) agreed with the trial court,
finding that this portion of the trial court’s analysis
would be “affirm[ed] without discussion.” Ruiz de Gamboa v.
Newth Gardens Condominium Association, Inc., Case No.
4D2024-0217 (Fla. 4th DCA Jun. 4, 2025).
The Fourth DCA’s affirmance of this portion of the trial
court’s final judgment – particularly without any discussion
– is surprising. The association in this case had adopted a
rule that limited the frequency of requests to once per
month. This frequency and similar general request
restrictions are commonly adopted by condominium
associations and, traditionally, have been presumed by
condominium associations to be reasonable. Given the court’s
new guidance, condominium associations should seriously
consider replacing general rules that do not consider the
anticipated ease of fulfilling a given request or the
resources of the condominium association available to
fulfill the request. A more nuanced rule can be drafted that
takes into account unique factors such as the size of the
request, the condominium association’s records retention
methods and the number of management and staff serving the
condominium association. Such a nuanced rule may reduce the
likelihood of a court finding the rule to be “so restrictive
that it substantially erodes the unit owner’s right to
access.”