FL-Carrollwood Care Center, LLC; Senior Health Management-Gold Coast, LLC; Dan Davis; Senior Health Management, LLC; Rick L. Knight; and Carla H. Russo (collectively “Carrollwood Care”) challenge the trial court’s denial of their motion to compel arbitration. We reverse the trial court’s order and remand the case for arbitration.
This is the second time this case is before this court. The underlying lawsuit stems from Robert Dixon Gordon’s stay at a Carrollwood Care facility for short-term rehabilitation following amputation of a toe. Mr. Gordon entered the facility on October 31, 2007. On November 1, 2007, he signed admissions-related paperwork which included an arbitration agreement. Mr. Gordon’s Estate subsequently sued Carrollwood Care alleging negligence and violations of chapter 400, Florida Statutes. Carrollwood Care moved to compel arbitration pursuant to the agreement signed by Mr. Gordon. The Estate responded that no valid arbitration agreement existed because Mr. Gordon lacked the necessary mental capacity to enter into a contract when he signed the agreement. Alternatively, the Estate argued that even if Mr. Gordon had the mental capacity to enter into a valid contract, the arbitration provision was unconscionable and, therefore, unenforceable.
In response to the Estate’s claims, Car-rollwood Care requested an evidentiary hearing to address the issue of Mr. Gordon’s mental capacity. The trial court denied the request for an evidentiary hearing, but nonetheless was persuaded by the Estate’s incompetence argument, and entered an order denying arbitration on that sole basis. Having ruled on the Estate’s first argument, the trial court did not address the unconscionability argument.
At an evidentiary hearing after remand, the Estate made the same two arguments it had made previously. After considering the evidence, the trial court concluded that the Estate had not shown that Mr. Gordon lacked mental capacity at the time he signed the arbitration agreement.
Initially, we reject Carollwood Care’s argument that the trial court exceeded this court’s mandate when it considered the Estate’s unconscionability argument on remand. Carrollwood Care argues that this court’s mandate limited the trial court to deciding only whether Mr. Gordon had mental capacity when he signed the arbitration agreement. We agree with the Estate’s response that the trial court properly considered the uncon-scionability argument because that alternative argument was presented to the trial court but never decided before the first appeal.
Although a trial court lacks authority to deviate from the terms of the appellate court’s instructions on remand, White Sands, Inc. v. Sea Club V. Condo. Ass’n,
On appeal, we accept the trial court’s factual findings if they are supported by competent, substantial evidence, but we review de novo the court’s construction of the arbitration provision and the application of the law to the facts. Woebse,
Procedural unconscionability relates to the manner in which the contract was made and involves issues such as the parties’ relative bargaining power and their ability to know and understand disputed contract terms. Id. at 256. A court can also find a contract unconscionable if important terms are hidden in fine print or if the contract reflects an absence of meaningful choice on the part of the consumer. See Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Petsch,
Here, the Estate argues that limitations on punitive damages, noneconomic damages, and discovery
This court has explained that Behan does not apply when the substantive law at issue allows an award of punitive damages. See, e.g., Reeves v. Ace Cash Express, Inc.,
The Estate’s and the trial court’s reliance on Woebse is therefore misplaced because the arbitration agreement in that case expressly barred a punitive damages award.
Other cases relied upon by the Estate are likewise inapplicable because they found a limitation on punitive damages void as contrary to public policy. See, e.g., SA-PG-Ocala, LLC v. Stokes,
Since the arbitration agreement here did not have a limitation on punitive damages, the next question is whether the agreement’s limitation on discovery and the agreement’s $250,000 cap on noneco-nomic damages, alone, support a finding of substantive unconscionability. We conclude they do not. The Estate has not cited to, and this court has been unable to locate, any cases where a limitation on discovery and a $250,000 cap on noneco-nomic damages alone-without a limitation on punitive damages-support a finding of substantive unconscionability. And this court has held that when an arbitration agreement requires an award to be consistent with Florida law, the arbitrator can decide in the first instance whether the agreement’s remedial limitations are enforceable. See, e.g., Jaylene, Inc. v. Steuer ex rel. Paradise,
We also conclude that the agreement’s severability clause would nevertheless save the arbitration agreement in this case, even if the $250,000 cap on noneco-nomic damages and the limitations on discovery were unenforceable. The sever-ability clause provides:
If any sentence, word, phrase, paragraph or portion of this Agreement should at any time be held invalid, unlawful, unconstitutional, or unenforceable for any reason, that holding will not affect in any way the meaning of the other sentences, words, phrases, paragraphs or portions of this Agreement, and all remaining portions shall remain in full force and effect as if the portion that was held invalid was not originally a part of the Agreement. In other words, even if a portion of the Agreement is determined to be invalid for some reason, the parties to this Agreement still want to arbitrate any issues that may arise out of the resident’s stay at the Facility.
In Alterra Healthcare Corp. v. Bryant,
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the trial court erred in finding the arbitration agreement unconscionable, and we remand the ease for arbitration.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The Estate had argued below that if the trial court decided the issue of Mr. Gordon’s mental capacity to enter into a valid contract in favor of the Estate, it would not need to reach the unconscionability argument.
. The Estate has not appealed that finding.
. While other cases address procedural un-conscionability first, we address substantive unconscionability first because that prong most easily disposes of the appeal. Therefore, we decline to address the procedural uncon-scionability argument as unnecessary to our decision.
. For example, the agreement limits depositions to those of experts and treating physicians.
.In fact, in its supplemental memorandum filed below, the Estate conceded that this court’s opinion in Reeves rendered Behan inapplicable because the underlying statute in this case authorized punitive damages. Yet, inexplicably, the argument was revived on appeal.
. This court has also held that the arbitrator should decide in the first instance whether limitations on liability are void as against public policy. See Jaylene, Inc. v. Steuer ex rel. Paradise,
. In fact, the party who would be negatively impacted by the severance of any allegedly offensive provision is the nursing home, which wants to enforce the arbitration agreement even if the challenged provisions were severed.
