Thank you for taking the time doing this, really appreciated. However I have to clarify that the document she says is not legally binding is the "Product Understanding Document" that they make buyers sign and is a summary of the POS. One of the points I made to her was that document changed over the years to reflect their different interpretations of the POS without changing the POS itself.
Paragraph 10.6.3 of the condominium declaration is legally binding but she couldn't answer about why it seems in clear contradiction with the reallocations they've done since 2013 and she'll come back to me about it.
By the way, today I found this in Florida statute:
The timeshare instrument must also provide for the application of any insurance proceeds arising from a casualty to either the replacement or acquisition of additional similar accommodations or facilities or to the removal of purchasers from the multisite timeshare plan so that purchasers will not be competing for available accommodations on a greater than one-to-one use right to use night requirement ratio.
Paragraph 10.6.3 has been written because of this. Another proof it's legally binding. And that paragraph clearly states that if a unit and all its owners are removed from the system because of destructive damage, then the rest of the resort will be in balance according to the one-to-one rule. This would prevent reallocation of points cross units.
We'll see what she replies to that, maybe that it only applies to the first year?
May I ask you a further favor and ask her one more thing?
The Florida statute says that the one-to-one rule applies to each timeshare unit, not the whole resort.
The definition of a timeshare unit is:
“Timeshare unit” means an accommodation of a timeshare plan which is divided into timeshare periods. Any timeshare unit in which a door or doors connecting two or more separate rooms are capable of being locked to create two or more private dwellings shall only constitute one timeshare unit for purposes of this chapter, unless the timeshare instrument provides that timeshare interests may be separately conveyed in such locked-off portions. (my emphasis)
My interpretation is that clearly a 3BR villa is a single timeshare unit. While there are doors separating private dwellings, those cannot be booked independently and you never find in the POS a reference to "the third bedroom of a grand villa".
The same is true for dedicated studios, 1BR and 2BR.
My doubt is for the 2BR lockoff. They can be locked to form two separated Vacation Homes (like Disney calls them). The issue revolves around what
conveyed means.
I've looked online but I'm not a lawyer. In the definitions of Conveying in legal terms I've found, it means: granting someone a right on something. So conveying a house means granting ownership of that house.
Can we say that the POS for SSR "conveys" also studios and 1BR?
I think it does because:
- the POS clearly defines the studios and 1BR as Vacation Homes, with no difference of definition from the other room types
- it says Vacation Homes will be numbered and portions of a lockoff have a number
- it explicitly says that a 2BR Vacation Home can be locked off into separate studios and 1BR Vacation Homes.
- there is a rule in the Membership agreement saying that owners will always be able to book at least one night in a studio or a 1BR for XX points
- there is a description of a maximum reallocation that could level the cost of studios and 1BR up to a certain maximum
- DVD sells fixed weeks for studios and 1BR also at resorts that do not have dedicated room (this is my strongest argument)
For all those reasons I think the POS
conveys also the locked off rooms, because it grants rights on them to owners. For this reason they have to be considered as timeshare units and so the one-to-one rule applies to them as well.
However, others disagree with me, I really would like the opinion of a lawyer who specializes on Timeshares.
Thank a lot if you could do this!