IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
WILLIAM H. BENSON AND NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
JOANNE BENSON, FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
Appellant,
CASE NO. 1D15-3259
v.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS,
Appellee.
_____________________________/
Opinion filed June 9, 2016.
An appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County.
George S. Reynolds, III, Judge.
Thomas J. Guilday and Catherine B. Chapman of Guilday, Schwartz, Simpson,
West, Hatch & Lowe, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellant.
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Jordan E. Pratt, Deputy Solicitor General,
Denise M. Harle, Deputy Solicitor General, Jonathan Glogau, Assistant Attorney
General, for Appellee.
OSTERHAUS, J.
William H. and Joanne Benson appeal a summary judgment order entered in
favor of the Florida Department of Corrections concluding that it did not breach a
lease for office space owned by the Bensons. We agree with the trial court’s decision
and affirm because the parties’ lease agreement conditioned the Department’s
performance upon annual legislative appropriations. And in this case, the General
Appropriations Act of 2011 effectively ended the Department’s obligation under the
lease by cutting its overall appropriation for office leases and including a restrictive
proviso that prevented the Department from paying rent to the Bensons once it
vacated the property and no longer needed it. We also agree that neither the proviso,
nor the Department’s response, violated the Florida Constitution.
I.
In 2007, the Department agreed to lease office space from the Bensons in Palm
Bay, Florida, for a term extending through 2015. State law requires that long-term
state leases condition an agency’s performance on annual legislative funding.
§ 255.2502, Fla. Stat. In accordance with the law, the Department’s lease with the
Bensons included a provision making its “performance and obligation to pay under
[the] contract . . . contingent upon an annual appropriation by the Legislature. F.S.
255.2502.” The parties’ landlord-tenant relationship proceeded relatively smoothly
until fiscal year 2011-2012, when the Legislature cut the Department’s funding for
leases by more than $1 million, and included a proviso prohibiting the Department
from paying rent for leased property “vacant on or after July 1, 2011, and for which
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it has been determined by the Secretary of the department that there is no longer a
need.” See Ch. 2011-69 Laws of Fla. 102.
The Department responded to the cuts by assembling a task force to identify
unnecessary leases, which recommended consolidating the Palm Bay Office leased
from the Bensons. The Department then undertook to relocate its staff and
equipment from the Palm Bay office to an office in Melbourne in early 2012. Once
the Department completed the move, it notified the Bensons on March 30, 2012, that
“the Secretary of the Department of Corrections has determined the space is no
longer needed.” The Department’s final rent payment paid the lease through April
2012.
After the Department ended the lease, the Bensons filed a lawsuit alleging that
the Department had breached, and that the legislative proviso violated the Florida
Constitution. The relief requested in the complaint included the rent due under the
lease agreement plus interest. The Department moved for summary judgment. And
after a hearing, the trial court granted the Department’s motion. The Bensons then
timely appealed.
II.
The central issue in this appeal is whether the lease agreement’s “Availability
of Funds” provision excused the Department’s obligation to perform after April
2012. This provision conditioned the Department’s obligation to perform and pay
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the lease upon the Legislature appropriating sufficient funds: “[t]he State of
Florida’s performance and obligation to pay under this contract is contingent upon
an annual appropriation by the Legislature.” The Legislature appropriated sufficient
funds for the first several years. But in 2011, the GAA cut the Department’s funding
and included a proviso prohibiting it from paying for leaseholds “vacant on or after
July 1, 2011, and for which it has been determined by the Secretary of the department
that there is no longer a need.” See Ch. 2011-69 Laws of Fla. 102. After July 1, 2011,
the Department vacated the leasehold and determined that the space wasn’t needed
any longer. Only then, after notifying the Bensons, did the Department cease paying
rent. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the Department did not breach the
lease. Rather, the “Availability of Funds” clause in the parties’ lease excused the
Department from its obligation to pay and perform under the lease. See Physicians
Health Care Plans, Inc. v. Cook, 714 So. 2d 566, 567–68 (Fla. 1st DCA 1998)
(recognizing that a state agency may terminate a lease if the Legislature does not
fund its lease commitments).
Finally, we find no merit in the Bensons’ various other arguments that the
proviso and the Department’s actions violated the Florida Constitution.
III.
We AFFIRM the summary judgment order entered below.
LEWIS and JAY, JJ., concur.
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