drusba
I went to Iowa once, and it was closed.
- Joined
- Aug 19, 1999
- Messages
- 14,852
This is Magical Law: sprinkle a contract with enough pixie dust and it can tell whatever you want. Not much different from saying the maximum reallocation is valid only the first year: the contract says explicitly something else.
When I spoke with Yvonne 2 days before the Big Rollback this was one of the two questions I left her with (the other being how they could increase the lockoff premium without balancing it anywhere else, when the contract says any increase must be balanced). I pointed to her paragraph 10.6.3 of the condominium declaration where it says what happens if a unit is damaged so it cannot be rebuilt and it is removed from the system.
This is what the contract says:
In this regard any insurance proceeding resulting from the failure to reconstruct or replace a Unit will be disboursed to affect Owners for their share of the non-reconstructed or replaced Unit resulting in their withdrawal from partecipation in the Home Resort Reservation Component and the DVC reservation component so that members of the Club will not be attempting to make reservations for available DVC Resort Vacation Homes on a greater than "one-to-one purchaser to accommodation ratio", as that term is defined in Section 721.05(23), Florida Statues
(my emphasis)
Nowhere in the POS a reallocation is allowed to rebalance the resort because of the removal of a Unit. A reallocation is allowed only to balance demand. What this paragraph says is that if a Unit and all its owners are removed from the system, then the rest of the resort must be in balance. This is coherent with the one-to-one rule in the Florida laws which applies to each Timeshare Unit, not to the whole resort. I haven't yet found and no one pointed an addendum to the law that for point timeshares it is different.
When she asked me what I wanted, I said they should rollback the reallocation to the 2019 charts (adjusted for floating holidays) and she replied that would not happen because everything had been done in accordance to the law and approved by the relevant authorities. But she promised to call me back in a week and answer to my questions. Well, two days later they rolled back the point charts and I haven't heard from her yet.
I am beginning to believe that Yvonne and DVC have a complete misunderstanding of the legal requirements. It seems she keeps saying that the law statutorily requires the kind of reallocation DVC wants to do to rebalance demand, and that the law therefore overrules anything in the POS, the DVC Membership Agreement, and DVC's representations as to what it is allowed to do. If that is what is going on, Yvonne and DVC are wrong. Let us look at the statutes. There are two potentially applicable statutes:
A. Fl. Stats §721.13 (12)(a and b) which read:
(a) In addition to any other rights granted by the rules and regulations of the timeshare plan, the managing entity of a timeshare plan is authorized to manage the reservation and use of accommodations using those processes, analyses, procedures, and methods that are in the best interests of the owners as a whole to efficiently manage the timeshare plan and encourage the maximum use and enjoyment of the accommodations and other benefits made available through the timeshare plan. The managing entity shall have the right to forecast anticipated reservation and use of the accommodations, including the right to take into account current and previous reservation and use of the accommodations, information about events that are scheduled to occur, seasonal use patterns, and other pertinent factors that affect the reservation or use of the accommodations. In furtherance of the provisions of this subsection, the managing entity is authorized to reserve accommodations, in the best interests of the owners as a whole, for the purposes of depositing such reserved use with an affiliated exchange program or renting such reserved accommodations in order to facilitate the use or future use of the accommodations or other benefits made available through the timeshare plan.
(b) A statement in conspicuous type, in substantially the following form, shall appear in the public offering statement as provided in s. 721.07:
The managing entity shall have the right to forecast anticipated reservation and use of the accommodations of the timeshare plan and is authorized to reasonably reserve, deposit, or rent the accommodations for the purpose of facilitating the use or future use of the accommodations or other benefits made available through the timeshare plan."
That is the statute applicable to DVCMC (now just DVCM) as the manager of the timeshare plan for each home resort and states what DVCM can do in relation to balancing demand at each separate home resort. The statute allows it to use computer methods and analysis to determine the varying demand that might exist at the resort. However, that statute does not allow DVCM to do anything about uneven demand by changing the applicable rules for making reservations at the home resort. That is because anything DVCM can do in that area is controlled by the POS and contracts applicable to the timeshare. The statute instead allows it to rent rooms or deposit them into any timeshare exchange program that the resort may be a part of in order fill unreserved rooms.
B. Fl Stats §721.56(6), which reads:
"Prior to offering the multisite timeshare plan, the developer shall create the reservation system and shall establish rules and regulations for its operation. In establishing these rules and regulations, the developer shall take into account the location and anticipated relative use demand of each component site that he or she intends to offer as a part of the plan and shall use his or her best efforts, in good faith and based upon all reasonably available evidence under the circumstances, to further the best interests of the purchasers of the plan as a whole with respect to their opportunity to use and enjoy the accommodations and facilities of the plan. The rules and regulations shall also provide for periodic adjustment or amendment of the reservation system by the managing entity from time to time in order to respond to actual purchaser use patterns and changes in purchaser use demand for the accommodations and facilities existing at that time within the plan. The person authorized to make additions and substitutions during the term of the multisite timeshare plan shall also comply with the requirements of this subsection in ascertaining the desirability of the proposed addition, substitution, adjustment, or amendment and the impact of same upon the demand for and availability of existing plan accommodations and facilities."
This is apparently the statute Yvonne and DVC are relying on to assert the home resort point charts can be changed despite anything in the POS, contracts and prior representations as to what is allowed. It would appear to possibly require a managing entity to adjust the point charts to balance out demand.
If that is DVC’s and Yvonne’s position, it has one major problem: the above section, and all of section 721.56 is inapplicable to home resort reservations. That statute applies to the managing entity of the multi-site portion of the timeshare and what that entity can do to balance demand among the sites. As I have noted before, our official POS’s and applicable agreements create two different managing entities, DVCM, which is responsible for home resort reservations and all operations of each individual resort, and BVTC, the managing entity of the DVC Reservation Component that controls the multi-site timeshare plan and all trading being done by members at 7 months out among the resorts. The documents actually provide that BVTC, not DVCM, is responsible for determining point requirements for reserving at 7 months out using the DVC Reservation Component and those point requirements can differ from the home resort requirements. Historically, BVTC has just followed the home resort requirements of DVCM, but it could choose to do otherwise to balance demand among the resorts.
In essence, it appears the statutory argument Yvonne and DVC are relying on to claim that DVC can change home resort point requirements is simply wrong.