PART E — LIABILITIES
[Required by Sec. 112.3145(3)(a)4 or (b)4, F.S.]
In this part of the form, list the name and address of each
creditor to whom you owed more than $10,000, at any time during the
disclosure period.
You are not required to list the amount of any indebtedness. You
do not have to disclose any of the following: credit card and retail
installment accounts, taxes owed (unless reduced to a judgment),
indebtedness on a life insurance policy owed to the company of
issuance, or contingent liabilities. A “contingent liability” is one that
will become an actual liability only when one or more future events
occur or fail to occur, such as where you are liable only as a guarantor,
surety, or endorser on a promissory note. If you are a “co-maker” and
have signed as being jointly liable or jointly and severally liable, then
this is not a contingent liability; if the total amount of the debt exceeds
$10,000 it should be reported.
PART F — INTERESTS IN SPECIFIED BUSINESSES
[Required by Sec. 112.3145(5), F.S.]
The types of businesses covered in this disclosure include: state
and federally chartered banks; state and federal savings and loan
associations; cemetery companies; insurance companies; mortgage
companies; credit unions; small loan companies; alcoholic beverage
licensees; pari-mutuel wagering companies, utility companies, entities
controlled by the Public Service Commission; and entities granted a
franchise to operate by either a city or a county government.
You are required to disclose in this part of the form the fact that
you owned during the disclosure period an interest in, or held any
of certain positions with, particular types of businesses listed above.
You are required to make this disclosure if you own or owned (either
directly or indirectly in the form of an equitable or beneficial interest) at
any time during the disclosure period more than 5% of the total assets
or capital stock of one of the types of business entities listed above.
You also must complete this part of the form for each of these types of
businesses for which you are, or were at any time during the disclosure
period, an officer, director, partner, proprietor, or agent (other than a
resident agent solely for service of process).
If you have or held such a position or ownership interest in one of
these types of businesses, list the name of the business, its address
and principal business activity, and the position held with the business
(if any). If you own(ed) more than a 5% interest in the business, you
must indicate that fact and describe the nature of your interest.
(End of Dollar Value Thresholds Instructions.)
PART A — PRIMARY SOURCES OF INCOME
[Required by Sec. 112.3145(3)(a)1 or (b)1, F.S.]
Part A is intended to require the disclosure of your principal sources
of income during the disclosure period. You do not have to disclose the
amount of income received, and you need not list your public salary
received from serving in the position(s) which requires you to file this
form, but this amount should be included when calculating your gross
income for the disclosure period. The income of your spouse need not
be disclosed; however, if there is joint income to you and your spouse
from property you own jointly (such as interest or dividends from a
bank account or stocks), you should include all of that income when
calculating your gross income and disclose the source of that income
if it exceeded the threshold.
Please list in this part of the form the name, address, and principal
business activity of each source of your income which exceeded 5%
of the gross income received by you in your own name or by any other
person for your benefit or use during the disclosure period.
"Gross income" means the same as it does for income tax
purposes, even if the income is not actually taxable, such as interest
on tax-free bonds. Examples include: compensation for services,
income from business, gains from property dealings, interest, rents,
dividends, pensions, IRA distributions, social security, distributive share
of partnership gross income, and alimony, but not child support.
Examples:
— If you were employed by a company that manufactures
computers and received more than 5% of your gross income
(salary, commissions, etc.) from the company, you should list
the name of the company, its address, and its principal business
activity (computer manufacturing).
— If you were a partner in a law firm and your distributive share
of partnership gross income exceeded 5% of your gross income,
then you should list the name of the firm, its address, and its
principal business activity (practice of law).
— If you were the sole proprietor of a retail gift business and
your gross income from the business exceeded 5% of your total
gross income, then you should list the name of the business, its
address, and its principal business activity (retail gift sales).
— If you received income from investments in stocks and
bonds, you are required to list only each individual company from
which you derived more than 5% of your gross income, rather
than aggregating all of your investment income.
— If more than 5% of your gross income was gain from the sale
of property (not just the selling price), then you should list as a
source of income the name of the purchaser, the purchaser’s
address, and the purchaser's principal business activity. If the
purchaser's identity is unknown, such as where securities listed
on an exchange are sold through a brokerage firm, the source of
income should be listed as "sale of (name of company) stock," for
example.
— If more than 5% of your gross income (or, alternatively,
$2,500) was in the form of interest from one particular financial
institution (aggregating interest from all CD’s, accounts, etc., at
that institution), list the name of the institution, its address, and its
principal business activity.
PART B — SECONDARY SOURCES OF INCOME
[Required by Sec. 112.3145(3)(a)2 or (b)2, F.S.]
This part is intended to require the disclosure of major customers,
clients, and other sources of income to businesses in which you own
an interest. It is not for reporting income from second jobs, etc. That
kind of income should be reported as a "Primary Source of Income,"
if it meets the reporting threshold. You will not have anything to report
unless during the disclosure period:
(1) You owned (either directly or indirectly in the form of an
equitable or beneficial interest) more than 5% of the total assets or
capital stock of a business entity (a corporation, partnership, LLC,
limited partnership, proprietorship, joint venture, trust, firm, etc.,
doing business in Florida); and
(2) You received more than 10% of your gross income from that
business entity; and
(3) You received more than $1,500 in gross income from that
business entity.
If your interests and gross income exceeded these thresholds, then
for that business entity you must list every source of income to the
business entity which exceeded 10% of the business entity’s gross
income (computed on the basis of the business entity’s most recently
completed fiscal year), the source’s address, and the source’s principal
business activity.
Examples:
— You are the sole proprietor of a dry cleaning business, from
which you received more than 10% of your gross income
—
an
amount that was more than $1,500. If only one customer, a uniform
rental company, provided more than 10% of your dry cleaning
business, you must list the name of the uniform rental company,
its address, and its principal business activity (uniform rentals).
IF YOU HAVE CHOSEN COMPARATIVE (PERCENTAGE) THRESHOLDS
THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS APPLY
CE FORM 1 - Effective: January 1, 2013. Refer to Rule 34-8.202(1), F.A.C. PAGE 5