7-Eleven, Inc. v. STIN, LLC
This text of 961 So. 2d 977 (7-Eleven, Inc. v. STIN, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
7-ELEVEN, INC., Appellant,
v.
STIN, L.L.C., Margaret Kobliska and Paul Flanigan, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Ronald S. Holliday and S. Douglas Knox of DLA Piper U.S. LLP, Tampa, for appellant.
Beverly A. Pohl and John R. Gillespie of Broad and Cassel, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee Paul Flanigan.
REYES, ISRAEL U., Associate Judge.
The Defendant lessee, 7-Eleven, Inc., timely appeals a final declaratory judgment, *978 stating that the owners/lessors, Margaret Kobliska and Stin, L.L.C., were obligated to sell the subject property to prospective buyer Paul Flanigan because 7-Eleven failed to exercise its right of first refusal. The standard of review is de novo. See Lawyers Title Ins. Co. v. Novastar Mortgage, Inc., 862 So.2d 793, 797 (Fla. 4th DCA 2003). We reverse.
In 1974, 7-Eleven and the property owners' predecessor entered into a lease, which contained a right of first refusal clause that is the subject of this appeal. Paragraph twenty, entitled "Right of First Refusal," states:
If during the term of this lease, or any extension thereof, Lessor shall receive a bona fide offer to purchase the demised premises, which offer is acceptable to Lessor, Lessor agrees that Lessee shall have and is hereby granted an option to purchase the demised premises upon the same terms and provisions. Lessor agrees immediately after receipt of such offer to give Lessee notice in writing of the terms and provisions thereof, and that Lessee may exercise its option to purchase said property at any time within twenty days after such notice is received by Lessee. If Lessee shall elect to exercise such option it shall do so by giving notice in writing to Lessor within such twenty-day period and a contract of sale shall be executed by the parties and title closed within a reasonable time thereafter.
On October 28, 2004, the owners and Paul Flanigan signed an agreement whereby Flanigan would purchase the property for $2,270,000. Flanigan gave the owners a deposit of $120,000. Flanigan's contract further provided that Flanigan and the owners would enter into a three-year lease that would have a monthly rent of $10,000. At the closing, which was to be at the end of the lease, the owners would receive the remaining $2,150,000 in the form of wired funds or a cashier's check. Flanigan would have all risk of condemnation until midnight of the closing date.
By letter dated October 29, 2004, the owners notified 7-Eleven, in accordance with paragraph twenty of 7-Eleven's lease, that they had received a "bona fide offer" and that 7-Eleven had
20 days from date of receipt of this notice to elect to purchase the property under the same terms and conditions contained in this offer which is acceptable to the Lessor. Your decision to exercise must be in writing and received by the undersigned, on behalf of the Lessor, within such 20 day period.
Upon receiving the letter, 7-Eleven sent a response, stating that
7-Eleven, Inc., hereby exercises its right to purchase the captioned property for Two Million Two Hundred Seventy Thousand and 00/100 Dollars ($2,270,000.00), pursuant to your letter dated October 29, 2004 and Article 20 of the lease dated March 26, 1974, originally between Palm Cottages and Apartments, Inc. and The Southland Corporation.
Within the next few days, a contract will be prepared and forwarded to you for signature on behalf of the landlord.
On December 2, 2004, the owners rejected 7-Eleven's first proposed contract, which followed the letter, stating:
[T]here [were] a number of essential terms in the Flanigan agreement which 7-Eleven chose not to match in its offer. These terms include, but are not limited to, the net consideration which would be realized by the seller under the Flanigan contract versus that offered by 7-Eleven, the availability of the deposit to the seller, assessment of closing costs, allocation of risk between buyer and seller *979 in the event of condemnation or casualty prior to closing, and the extent of seller's and buyer's remedies in the event of the other party's default.
Due to the above differences in the contract proposals, the owner must reject 7-Eleven's offer as not satisfying the requirements of the right of first refusal and will now proceed with the Flanigan contract.
The day after the owners rejected the offer, 7-Eleven informed the owners that it was "prepared to match the terms, as outlined in the Purchase Agreement between [the owners], as Seller and Paul Flanigan, as buyer, dated October 28, 2004." Thereafter, 7-Eleven sent a follow-up letter reaffirming that "7-Eleven [was] prepared to meet all material terms of the Flanigan agreement in connection with its election to exercise its right of first refusal under its Lease Agreement." This letter also said that enclosed was a "revised Purchase Agreement." The revised agreement stated that the purchase price was $2,150,000, but, for three years, 7-Eleven would lease the property for an additional $10,000 a month. Unlike the prior agreement, this contract did not mention putting money in escrow, and this agreement said 7-Eleven bore the risk of condemnation. According to the owners' attorney, this version included the material terms.
After receiving 7-Eleven's second contract, the owners sought declaratory relief. The owners requested that the trial court determine that 7-Eleven did not properly exercise its right of first refusal, relying on the deficiencies of the first proposed contract. When answering the complaint, 7-Eleven admitted that, in November of 2004, it gave the owners the first "proposed contract." After the owners said the contract contained "certain deficiencies," 7-Eleven "transmitted a revised Purchase Agreement to Plaintiffs on December 13, 2004." 7-Eleven believed that "to the extent the so-called `November Agreement' contained any deficiencies, . . . [they were cured] by the [] `December Agreement.'"
Thereafter, Flanigan and 7-Eleven moved for summary judgment. According to 7-Eleven, the right of first refusal contemplated a three-step process. First, once the owners received a suitable offer, they were obligated to provide 7-Eleven with written notice. Second, 7-Eleven had twenty days to inform the owners of its decision to purchase the property. Third, 7-Eleven and the owners were obligated to enter into a contract within a reasonable time period.
In its motion, and at a subsequent hearing, 7-Eleven argued it was entitled to summary judgment because it submitted a letter that provided notice and also submitted "a proposed contract" and a revised contract. According to 7-Eleven, the only real difference between its first contract and Flanigan's was Flanigan's provision for a lease, and, despite any differences, its agreement met or exceeded Flanigan's material terms.
The trial court granted summary judgment in Flanigan's favor. The trial court found that 7-Eleven's first proposed agreement had material differences because it did not contain a three-year lease provision, failed to require a deposit, and was silent as to the sharing of responsibility in the event of condemnation. Thus, the first proposed contract failed to meet the essential terms, and the company failed to properly exercise the right of first refusal.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
961 So. 2d 977, 2007 WL 1754999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/7-eleven-inc-v-stin-llc-fladistctapp-2007.