Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees v. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Foundation, Inc.

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 4, 2025
DocketSC2023-1470
StatusPublished

This text of Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees v. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Foundation, Inc. (Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees v. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Foundation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees v. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Foundation, Inc., (Fla. 2025).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC2023-1470 ____________

FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES, Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

vs.

HARBOR BRANCH OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE FOUNDATION, INC., Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

December 4, 2025

COURIEL, J.

The Florida Constitution states that no “law impairing the

obligation of contracts shall be passed.” Art. I, § 10, Fla. Const.

Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Foundation, Inc.

(Foundation), a research institute affiliated with Florida Atlantic

University (FAU), claims that the Legislature violated this guarantee

when it adopted the Florida Excellence in Higher Education Act of

2018. Specifically, the Foundation says that the Act’s requirement

that all Foundation board members be approved by the FAU

trustees unconstitutionally impairs a memorandum of understanding (MOU) it negotiated with the university. The

Foundation makes the same argument about a rule adopted by the

Board of Governors of the State University System of Florida, which,

the Foundation says, contravenes the same memorandum by

reducing its control over its budget. After careful consideration, we

conclude that neither of the contested provisions unconstitutionally

interferes with the parties’ agreement.

I

In Florida, a university direct-support organization is a non-

profit corporation “[o]rganized and operated exclusively to receive,

hold, invest, and administer property and to make expenditures to

or for the benefit of a state university in Florida or for the benefit of

a research and development park or research and development

authority affiliated with a state university.” § 1004.28(1)(a)2., Fla.

Stat. (2025). In 2007, after experiencing financial trouble, the

Foundation agreed in the MOU to become such an organization—a

DSO—affiliated with FAU.

DSOs are highly regulated and, as the definition above

suggests, exist for an exclusive, statutorily prescribed purpose.

Section 1004.28 governs their use of university property and

-2- facilities, giving each affiliated university oversight powers over a

DSO’s budget and board of directors, restricting its political

activities, exempting it from public records requests, and

prescribing financial audits. In exchange, DSOs get to use a

university’s property, facilities, and the work of its people. See

§ 1004.28(2)(b).

Relevant to this litigation, the MOU included the following

provisions: “The [Foundation’s] board of directors will have two (2)

appointees from FAU”; and “Foundation distributions shall be made

in the sole discretion of the [Foundation] Board of Directors to

defray the expenses of its operations, to restore restricted corpus

and retire debt, and to or for the benefit of [the Foundation at FAU]

or FAU.”

In 2009, the Florida Board of Governors (BOG) amended BOG

Regulation 9.011(3). 1 The amendment required that DSO budgets

1. Under article IX, section 7 of the Florida Constitution, the Florida state university system is overseen and controlled by a BOG. “The board shall operate, regulate, control, and be fully responsible for the management of the whole university system.” Art. IX, § 7(d), Fla. Const. As part of its oversight power, the BOG can adopt regulations. See § 1001.706(2), Fla. Stat. (2025). Current regulations govern state universities on matters such as

-3- be “approved by the organization’s governing board and the

university board of trustees.” 2 In 2017, FAU took efforts to exercise

control over the Foundation’s budget. It proposed to transfer all

legal, communications, accounting, auditing, development, and

staffing functions to FAU. It also did away with the Foundation’s

CEO, defunding the position and replacing the CEO with FAU’s Vice

President for Research as the Foundation’s president.

That led to this case. Seeking clarity about its power to spend,

in March 2017, the Foundation sought a declaratory judgment that

FAU “is not permitted to impose its proposed budget on the

Foundation, or any other budget that would substantially impair or

destroy the Foundation’s discretion to make distributions and

ensure that its grants are properly administered and accounted

student admissions, tuition and fees, property and finance, and purchasing. See generally State University System of Florida, Active Regulations (2025), https://www.flbog.edu/regulations/active-regulations. Section 1004.28(2)(b), Florida Statutes, permits the BOG to adopt regulations for DSOs. Under this authority, the BOG adopted BOG Regulation 9.011, which regulates DSOs.

2. This regulation has since been renumbered to 9.011(4). So, 9.011(4) refers to the amended BOG Regulation giving university boards of trustees approval power over DSO budgets.

-4- for.” While that matter was pending, the Florida Legislature passed

the Florida Excellence in Higher Education Act of 2018. See ch.

2018-4, Laws of Fla. Relevant here is section 1004.28(3), Florida

Statutes, which provides that the “university board of trustees shall

approve all appointments to any direct-support organization not

authorized by this subsection.”3 Pursuant to this statute, in May

2019, FAU told the Foundation to submit all board appointees for

FAU consideration and approval. The Foundation refused.

In June 2019, FAU filed its own claim for declaratory

judgment, asking the court to decide the budget dispute in its favor.

FAU also asked the court for a declaration that section 1004.28(3)

required the Foundation to submit its board appointees to FAU for

approval.

The Foundation answered, asserting, as an affirmative

defense, that amended section 1004.28(3) impaired its rights under

the MOU in violation of article I, section 10 of the Florida

Constitution. This provision states, in its entirety, that “[n]o bill of

3. There have been no relevant changes to the statute since 2018.

-5- attainder, ex post facto law or law impairing the obligation of

contracts shall be passed.” Art. I, § 10, Fla. Const. The Foundation

did not notify the attorney general or the state attorney that it

raised this constitutional challenge to section 1004.28(3), even

though Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.071 required it to do so. 4

The trial court determined that both relevant provisions of the

MOU contained latent ambiguities. In this context, “latent

4. This rule states:

A party that files a pleading, written motion, or other document drawing into question the constitutionality of a state statute or a county or municipal charter, ordinance, or franchise must promptly

(a) file a notice of constitutional question stating the question and identifying the document that raises it; and

(b) serve the notice and the pleading, written motion, or other document drawing into question the constitutionality of a state statute or a county or municipal charter, ordinance, or franchise on the Attorney General or the state attorney of the judicial circuit in which the action is pending, by either certified or registered mail.

Service of the notice and pleading, written motion, or other document does not require joinder of the Attorney General or the state attorney as a party to the action.

Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.071.

-6- ambiguities are those which appear only as the result of considering

extrinsic or collateral evidence that shows that a word, thought to

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