THE BLIND MONK, LLC v. 410 EVERNIA STREET PARTNERS, LLC ( 2023 )


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  •         DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    THE BLIND MONK, LLC,
    Appellant,
    v.
    USO NORGE WHITNEY, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,
    and 410 EVERNIA STREET PARTNERS, LLC, a Florida
    limited liability company,
    Appellees.
    No. 4D22-569
    [July 19, 2023]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
    Beach County; Richard L. Oftedal, Senior Judge; L.T. Case No. 50-2018-
    CA-001997-XXXX-MB.
    Jack Scarola of Searcy Denney Scarola Barnhart & Shipley, P.A., West
    Palm Beach, and Kara Rockenbach Link and Daniel M. Schwarz of Link &
    Rockenbach, PA, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
    Peter M. Armold of Gary Dtyrych & Ryan, P.A., North Palm Beach, for
    appellee 410 Evernia Street Partners, LLC.
    WARNER, J.
    Appellant, a commercial condominium tenant (Tenant), sued its
    Landlord and the Purchaser of Tenant’s condominium unit over the failure
    of the Landlord to abide by a right of first refusal (ROFR) in Tenant’s lease.
    As to Landlord, Tenant claimed that it was entitled to specific performance
    of its ROFR.      As to Purchaser, Tenant sought rescission of the
    condominium sale, because the sale was in derogation of the ROFR.
    Landlord and Purchaser moved for summary judgment, contending that
    Tenant had not shown that it was ready, willing, and able to complete the
    purchase price. The trial court agreed with Landlord and Purchaser and
    granted summary judgment.          We reverse, as neither Landlord nor
    Purchaser provided Tenant with the purchase price and terms of their sale
    of the unit. Thus, Tenant was not required to prove itself ready, willing,
    and able to comply with an undisclosed purchase agreement.
    Tenant leases Unit 107 of the Whitney Condominium where it operates
    a wine and tapas bar. Its lease from Landlord commenced in March 2010
    and contained a ROFR, which provided:
    RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL: The premises is not currently
    being offered to sale but Landlord and Tenant recognize the
    possibility that it may be offered for sale at some later date.
    Tenant may desire to purchase the property if and when it is
    offered for sale. In consideration of the premises and of the
    payment of the rent by Tenant, Landlord grants to Tenant, a
    right of first refusal with respect to the above-described
    property as follows:
    1. If Landlord desires to sell the above-described property and
    receives from a third party a bona fide offer for the purchase
    thereof, Landlord agrees to disclose the terms of such offer to
    Tenant, in writing, with seven (7) days following receipt of the
    offer.
    2. Tenant shall have thirty (30) days after receiving notice of
    the terms of the offer within which to elect to purchase the
    property on terms identical to those offered by the third party.
    Such election shall be made by written notice to Landlord at
    address set forth herein, accompanied by a check for ten
    percent (10%) of the purchase price, to be applied to the
    purchase price at closing. Within five (5) days thereafter, the
    parties shall enter into a formal contract of sale expressly
    including all terms of the original bona fide offer made to
    Landlord, except as the parties may mutually agree. If the
    contract is rescinded for any reason as set forth therein, all
    amounts paid by Tenant to Landlord shall be returned.
    3. If Tenant fails to give the notice and to tender the payment
    as provided in Paragraph 2, Landlord shall be relieved of all
    liability to Tenant hereunder and may dispose of the property
    as Landlord sees fit.
    In October 2016, a realtor representing Landlord notified Tenant’s
    president that Landlord was offering the Whitney units for sale to the
    current tenants. The realtor asked Tenant’s president if he would be
    interested in purchasing Unit 107. Tenant’s president replied that he
    would be interested in the purchase and would look into financing.
    Tenant’s president requested any information about outstanding offers on
    Unit 107, citing his ROFR.
    2
    About a week later, the realtor advised Tenant’s president that Unit 107
    was appraised at $250,000 and Landlord had an offer on the unit.
    However, the realtor did not disclose the specific terms of the outstanding
    offer. Tenant’s president replied that he would follow up later that week.
    However, the next day, the realtor notified Tenant’s president that
    Landlord was moving to a bulk sale of the entire Whitney building and was
    suspending all retail sales in the building “to keep inventory straight[.]”
    Landlord moved forward with the bulk sale of 139 Whitney
    condominium units to Purchaser. The sale agreement notified and made
    available to Purchaser the leases for the condominium units prior to
    closing. The agreement provided that Purchaser had the obligation to
    review all materials submitted. Landlord did not disclose to Tenant any
    offer to purchase before closing on the sale. Tenant learned of the bulk
    sale when Tenant received notice to send future rent checks to Purchaser.
    After the sale, Tenant filed a complaint against both Landlord and
    Purchaser, bringing a claim for rescission of the contract and cancellation
    of the deed against both defendants, as well as claims for specific
    performance and breach of contract against Landlord and a claim for
    tortious interference with a contract against Purchaser. Tenant sought
    rescission of the deed to allow it to exercise its ROFR under its lease. The
    specific performance count against Landlord demanded that Landlord
    comply with the ROFR by informing Tenant of the purchase price Landlord
    had negotiated with Purchaser for Unit 107 and providing Tenant with the
    opportunity to purchase the unit under the same terms. Alternatively,
    Tenant sued Landlord for breach of the ROFR and requested damages.
    Purchaser filed a motion to dismiss Tenant’s rescission and tortious
    interference claims. Purchaser argued that Tenant could not receive
    rescission and specific performance because Tenant was a stranger to the
    purchase contract, and Tenant had not alleged it was financially ready,
    willing, and able to purchase Unit 107. Tenant filed a response, arguing
    that the facts pled were sufficient to excuse it from the usual “ready, willing
    and able” test, because Tenant had not been provided Unit 107’s purchase
    price and therefore could not prove its ability to match that price. After a
    hearing, the trial court denied Purchaser’s motion to dismiss.
    Purchaser answered Tenant’s complaint, denying notice of Tenant’s
    ROFR and raising the affirmative defenses that Tenant had not pled it was
    ready, willing and able to purchase Unit 107. It also alleged that Tenant’s
    ROFR was not triggered, because purchase of Unit 107 would not be
    3
    identical to Purchaser’s purchase by bulk sale of the 139 units in the
    Whitney.
    After some discovery, Purchaser moved for summary judgment against
    Tenant’s claims for rescission and tortious interference, but only the
    rescission claim is pertinent to this appeal. Purchaser argued that Tenant
    had not shown that it was ready, willing and able to purchase the
    condominium unit because the “commitments” which Tenant had secured
    from its president’s parents were not exchanged for consideration, and
    therefore were not legally binding.
    Tenant filed a response, arguing it was unable to obtain a more
    traditional financial commitment because the purchase price and terms
    were undisclosed. Tenant argued that without a purchase price for the
    unit, all Tenant could obtain was its president’s parents’ commitments,
    which Tenant argued were binding.
    At the hearing on the summary judgment, Tenant repeated these
    arguments. Counsel noted that neither Landlord nor Purchaser provided
    Tenant with the terms of any purchase, asking “[h]ow can [Tenant] go to
    any lender and say I want to borrow the funds necessary to meet this third-
    party offer and exercise my right of first refusal if he’s never told what it is
    he needs to match?”
    The trial court issued an order granting Purchaser’s motion for
    summary judgment on the rescission count. The trial court found that
    both commitments were gifts rather than binding contracts to loan. In
    addition, the trial court noted that rescinding the entire bulk sale would
    serve no purpose if Tenant was not entitled to specific performance.
    Tenant moved for reconsideration, arguing that the trial court
    misunderstood Tenant’s objectives because Tenant did not seek to rescind
    the entire bulk sale but only to exempt Unit 107 from the purchase.
    Tenant also moved for rehearing, again arguing the “practical
    impossibility” of proving its ability to match an offer which was not
    disclosed. The trial court denied the motion.
    Tenant now appeals the summary judgment as to Purchaser only, as
    the summary judgment as to Landlord is not a final order while other
    claims against Landlord remain pending.
    Appellate courts review a trial court’s entry of summary judgment de
    novo. United Auto. Ins. Co. v. Lauderhill Med. Ctr. LLC, 
    350 So. 3d 754
    ,
    756 (Fla. 4th DCA 2022). Summary judgment is appropriate where the
    4
    movant shows no genuine disputes as to any material facts remain and
    the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fla. R. Civ. P.
    1.510(a).
    Tenant argues that summary judgment was improper on its rescission
    claim because Purchaser’s contention that Tenant had no proof that it was
    ready, willing and able to close on the sale of Unit 107 could not be decided
    before Landlord had complied with the ROFR by submitting the offer of
    purchase to Tenant. Genuine issues of material fact remained regarding
    the purchase price for Unit 107. Without the tender of the purchase price
    and terms of offer, Tenant could not exercise its ROFR. Thus, Tenant
    contends that Unit 107’s purchase price should have been determined
    before evaluating whether Tenant had the ability to complete the sale and
    before ruling on Tenant’s rescission count against Purchaser.
    While Purchaser concedes that Unit 107’s purchase price was not
    determined below, Purchaser argues that the specific purchase price is not
    necessary to resolve whether the commitments were enforceable, which is
    dispositive as to whether Tenant was “ready, willing and able” to perform.
    Tenant replies that the trial court could not perform the “ready, willing and
    able” analysis without the specific purchase price, and the trial court erred
    in granting summary judgment on this ground. 1 We agree with Tenant.
    Although Landlord and Purchaser entered into a bulk sale of the
    remaining condominium units in the Whitney, this does not preclude
    either rescission or cancellation of the deed to Unit 107, or specific
    performance of the ROFR. In Denco, Inc. v. Belk, 
    97 So. 2d 261
     (Fla. 1957)
    (Denco I), a lease agreement contained a ROFR, yet the landlord sold the
    property to a third party as part of a sale of the leased property and other
    properties. 
    Id. at 262
    . The tenant filed suit, claiming its right to exercise
    the ROFR. 
    Id.
     at 262–63. As relief, it requested cancellation of the deed
    to the purchaser of the leased property and for the landlord to notify the
    tenant of the purchase price of the property so that the tenant could
    purchase the property. 
    Id. at 263
    . The trial court denied a motion to
    dismiss the cause of action, and a petition for certiorari was taken to the
    1 Purchaser claims that Tenant made strategic decisions not to seek the
    determination of a purchase price. But our review of the record shows that
    Tenant through discovery and pleadings raised the issue continually throughout
    the litigation, thus preserving the argument made on appeal. The complaint itself
    demanded specific performance by the Landlord offering Tenant Unit 107 at the
    price Purchaser offered to pay. In addition, through discovery, Tenant sought to
    determine what that purchase price was, but Landlord objected to all requests
    for production of documents revealing the unit pricing in the sales contract.
    5
    Florida Supreme Court, which held that the trial court’s denial of dismissal
    was proper:
    The real and basic issue in this case, however, is simply
    whether the purchaser of this land, not only charged with
    knowledge of the rights of the lessee as a matter of law but
    placed on direct notice by the very provisions of the deed he
    accepted, may defeat the substantial rights of the lessee under
    the terms of this lease. Denco is not a bona fide purchaser.
    Denco, Inc. comes within the rule that persons dealing with
    an owner of land for purposes of sale or purchase who have
    knowledge of possession by a lessee, are placed on inquiry as
    to the full terms and conditions of the lease, including a
    provision granting a right of first refusal of purchase to the
    lessee if the lessor decides to sell the property during the term
    of the lease. We think the law and every concept of equity and
    good conscience requires Denco, Inc. to recognize the rights of
    the lessee under all of the provisions of the lease under which
    he holds possession of the property, not the least of these being
    the option above alluded to.
    
    Id. at 265
     (emphasis added) (internal citations omitted). 2
    On remand from Denco I, the trial court determined the optioned
    parcel’s value by allocating a portion of the bulk purchase, which the
    Second District approved on appeal, finding “no error inherent in the
    chancellor’s method of allocating a proportionate part of the total price to
    the property covered by appellee’s option.” Denco, Inc. v. Belk, 
    109 So. 2d 201
    , 201 (Fla. 2d DCA 1959) (Denco II). In approving the trial court’s
    method, the Second District wrote that any of the purchaser’s objections
    “relating to the uncertainty of the price allocable to the property leased by
    appellee, and the chancellor’s method of determination, are occasioned by
    [the purchaser’s] own act, i.e., purchasing the property in question,
    together with other properties, for a lump sum payment, with knowledge
    of appellee’s first refusal option.” 
    Id.
    Denco I and Denco II make clear that where a bulk sale of property
    occurs, some of which is the subject of a ROFR, an owner is not excused
    from its obligation to offer the property to the ROFR’s holder. To provide
    2 In this case, Purchaser had at least constructive knowledge of the Tenant’s
    ROFR, because the active leases were among the due diligence materials which
    Purchaser had the obligation to review and approve, and it was provided all of
    the leases on the Whitney condominium units.
    6
    the holder with its contractual right, a trial court must enforce the ROFR
    and determine what portion of the bulk sale purchase price should be
    allocated to the ROFR property.
    Similarly, in Whyhopen v. Via, 
    404 So. 2d 851
     (Fla. 2d DCA 1981), the
    landlord refused to permit the tenant to exercise a right of first refusal
    where the landlord sold the leased property in a bulk sale with other
    properties. 
    Id. at 852
    . The tenant filed suit against the landlord and the
    purchaser for cancellation of the deed, specific performance, damages, and
    tortious interference. 
    Id.
     The trial court granted a motion to dismiss,
    because the tenant had not sought to exercise an option to purchase all
    the properties. 
    Id.
     The appellate court rejected that holding, relying on
    Denco I to hold that the tenant was not required to purchase the entire
    properties of the bulk sale in order to exercise its option. 
    Id.
     at 852–53
    (citing Denco I, 
    97 So. 2d 261
    ). The court also noted that:
    Once the landlord evidenced an intention to sell the property,
    tenants’ right of first refusal was converted into an irrevocable
    option to purchase. Vorpe v. Key Island, Inc., 
    374 So. 2d 1035
    (Fla. 2d DCA 1979). The third-party purchaser is subject to
    this right.
    Id. at 853.
    Applying these holdings, once the Landlord decided to sell the unit, the
    Landlord had to comply with the ROFR. The ROFR required the Landlord
    to disclose the purchase price and terms to Tenant to allow Tenant to
    decide whether to exercise the ROFR to purchase. The Landlord failed to
    do that, and Tenant filed suit to obtain both specific performance and
    cancellation of the deed to Purchaser of Unit 107. Based upon Denco I,
    Denco II, and Whyhopen, not only did Tenant state a cause of action, but
    the trial court also had a duty to determine the purchase price and terms
    so that Tenant could obtain the benefit of its ROFR.
    Instead of following Denco I and Denco II, Purchaser contended that, as
    the party seeking specific performance of a real estate contract, Tenant
    had to prove that it was ready, willing, and able to complete the purchase
    in order to exercise its ROFR. Purchaser relied on Hollywood Mall, Inc. v.
    Capozzi, 
    545 So. 2d 918
     (Fla. 4th DCA 1989). However, Capozzi is
    inapplicable under the circumstances of this case.
    In Capozzi, the buyer sought specific performance of an executed real
    estate contract between itself and the seller where all terms of the contract
    were established, and the purchase price was known. 
    Id.
     at 919–20. The
    7
    trial court had granted specific performance, but we reversed, holding that
    the corporation which sought to purchase the property had not proven
    that it was ready, willing, and able to purchase. 
    Id. at 920
    . In the opinion,
    we listed three non-exclusive methods by which a purchaser could prove
    it was ready, willing, and able to close on the transaction. 
    Id.
     at 920–21.
    As noted by Tenant in its brief, Capozzi has never been applied to a
    case involving an option to purchase or a ROFR. Thus, Capozzi does not
    provide guidance for specific performance where a purchase price is
    unknown.
    In this case, pursuant to the ROFR, Landlord was contractually
    obligated to convey a firm purchase offer, including the price and terms,
    to Tenant. Tenant then would have a period of time to determine whether
    to accept the offer. Upon acceptance, a binding purchase contract would
    be formed. Only if Landlord failed to sell to Tenant in accordance with
    those terms would Tenant have to show that it was ready, willing, and able
    to complete the purchase in accordance with those terms in any suit for
    specific performance. Landlord and Purchaser cannot preemptively
    determine that Tenant has no ability to comply with the ROFR or demand
    that Tenant show its ability to close without extending to Tenant a
    purchase offer. Moreover, as Tenant’s counsel stated, how could a party
    obtain a binding financial commitment without the third-party knowing
    what amount of money would be needed to close the transaction?
    We liken this case to Jarvis v. Peltier, 
    400 S.W. 3d 644
     (Tex. App. 2013).
    There, the party holding an option on property discovered that the property
    had been sold and deeded to a third-party. 
    Id. at 648
    . The optionor sought
    to exercise his option and demanded to know the price paid by the
    purchaser, which the seller refused to disclose. 
    Id. at 649
    . The optionor
    filed suit against both the seller and the purchaser. 
    Id.
     The trial court
    granted the purchaser’s motion for summary judgment, partially on the
    ground that the optionor had not complied with the option’s terms. 
    Id.
    On appeal, the court reversed, noting that the optionor must be excused
    from failing to comply with the option’s terms, because the purchase price
    was never disclosed to him.
    [W]hen the rightholder [option holder] learns of a sale in
    violation of his right, he again has the opportunity to elect to
    purchase or decline to purchase within the time frame
    specified in the contract creating the right of first refusal. The
    rightholder does not have a duty to act in order to exercise his
    preferential purchase right unless and until he receives a
    reasonable disclosure of the terms of the sale. The new
    8
    property owner has a duty to make reasonable disclosure of
    the terms of the purchase to the rightholder.
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added) (internal citations omitted). Here, both Landlord and
    Purchaser failed to provide Tenant with the purchase price and terms of
    the sale of Unit 107. Until they provided this information, Tenant had no
    “duty to act.” As Tenant had no duty to act, Tenant also had no duty to
    show that it was ready, willing, and able to meet some undisclosed
    purchase price.
    We thus reverse the summary judgment and remand for further
    proceedings. Pursuant to Denco I, Denco II and Whyhopen, the court must
    first determine the purchase price and terms of the sale of Unit 107 in
    accordance with the agreement between Landlord and Purchaser.
    Discovery may reveal that the parties assigned a specific value to the unit
    in the sales contract, or the court may be required to determine the sale
    price. 3 Once the purchase price and terms are determined, then according
    to the ROFR, Tenant will have thirty days in which to elect whether to
    purchase the property. In order to prevent useless judicial labor, the court
    may wish to defer consideration of Tenant’s rescission claim until Tenant
    decides whether or not to exercise its ROFR.
    Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    MAY and GERBER, JJ., concur.
    *         *          *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    3 In Denco I, the supreme court cited with approval Brenner v. Duncan, 
    27 N.W.2d 320
     (Mich. 1947). Denco I, 
    97 So. 2d at 265
    . Brenner dealt with a sale of lands,
    which, under similar circumstances to the case here, involved an option to
    purchase without establishment of a price. The court held that “it is competent
    for the court to fix the option price, afford the optionee an opportunity to accept
    and thereupon specifically enforce the resulting contract.” Brenner, 27 N.W.2d
    at 322.
    9