On Motion for Rehearing
We grant Santana Sales & Marketing Group, Inc.’s (“Appellee”) amended motion for rehearing, withdraw our former opinion dated November 14, 2012, and substitute the following opinion in its stead:
Espresso Disposition Corporation 1 and Rowland Coffee Roasters, Inc. (collectively “Appellants”) seek review of the trial court’s order denying their motions to dismiss Appellee’s third amended complaint. Appellants claim that the trial court erred in denying their motions to dismiss because the plain and unambiguous language in the parties’ brokеrage agreement contains a mandatory forum selection clause requiring that all lawsuits brought under the agreement shall be in Illinois. We agree.
Espresso Disposition Corporation 1 and Santana and Associates entered into the brokerage agreement in 2002.
*594 The venue with respect to any action 'pertaining to this Agreement shall be the State of Illinois. The laws of the State of Illinois shall govern the application and interpretation of this Agreement.
(Emphasis added). However, Appellee filed a lawsuit against Appellants alleging a breach of the agreement in Miami-Dade County, Florida. In fact, Appellee filed four subsequent complaints — an initial cоmplaint, amended complaint, second amended complaint, and third amended complaint — after each and every previous pleading’s dismissal was basеd upon venue as provided for in the agreement’s mandatory forum selection clause. Appellee’s third amended complaint alleges the forum selection clause was a mistake that was made at the time the agreement was drafted. Additionally, Appellee attached an affidavit which states that, in drafting the agrеement, Appellee’s principal copied a form version of an agreement between different parties, and by mistake, forgot to change the venue provision from Illinois to Florida. In response, Appellants filed their motions to dismiss the third amended complaint, which the trial court denied.
Florida appellate courts interpret a contractual forum selection clause under a de novo standard of review. Am. Safety Cas. Ins. Co. v. Mijares Holding Co., LLC,
Florida courts have long recognized that “forum selection clauses such as the one at issue here are presumрtively valid.” Corsec, S.L. v. VMC Int’l Franchising, LLC,
Because Florida law presumes that forum selection clauses are valid and еnforceable, the “party seeking to avoid enforcement of such a clause must establish that enforcement would be unjust or unreasonable.” Am. Safety Cas.,
Further, “[a]s we have said on a number of occasions, if a forum selection clause ‘unambiguously’ mandates that litigation be subject to an agreed upon forum, then it is reversible error for the trial court to ignore the clause.” Sonus-USA, Inc. v. Thomas W. Lyons, Inc.,
Appellee would have us create an exception to our jurisprudence on mandatory forum selection clauses based on their error in cutting and pasting the clause from another agreement. Of course, the origin of “cutting and pasting” comes from the traditional practice of manuscript-editing whereby writers used to cut paragraphs from a page with “editing scissors,” that had blades long enough to cut an 8½" —wide page, and then physically pasted them onto another page. Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cut,_copy,_ ancLpáste (last visited September 17, 2012). Today, the cut, copy, and paste functions contained in word processing software render unnecessary the use of scissors or glue. However, what has not been eliminated is the need to actually read and analyze the text being pasted, especially where it is to have legal significance. Thus, in reviewing the mandatory selection clause which Appellant seeks to enforce, we apply the legal maxim “be careful what you ask for” and enforce the pasted forum.
Accordingly, we reverse trial court’s denial of the motions to dismiss Appellee’s third amended complaint on the basis of improper venue, and remand for entry of an order of dismissal.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Rowland assumed the agreement in May 2011. Rowland purchased Espresso Disposition Corporation f/k/a Rowland Coffee Roasters. Thus, Rowland acquired Rowland Coffee Rosters. As such, the Rowland Coffee Roasters named in the 2002 agreеment in now Espresso Disposition Corporation.
. During the pendency of the underlying lawsuit, Appellants filed and served three separate motions for sanctions pursuаnt to section 57.105, Florida Statutes, claiming that Appel-lee’s lawsuit was frivolous given the well-established law on mandatory forum selection provisions and the substantive deficiencies in Appellee's allegations.
. Appellee did not argue unilateral mistake to the trial court. However, even if Appellee had so argued, any purported unilateral mistake resulted from an inexcusable lack of due care on the part of Appellee’s counsel, thereby precluding relief under a theory of unilateral mistake. See Stamato v. Stamato,
Although Appellee argued mutual mistake, that argument was equally meritless as there was simply no evidence in the record of any mistake whatsoever by Appellants. See Keystone Creations, Inc. v. City of Delray Beach,
