The issue we must resolve in-this appeal is whether full performance of an alleged oral employment agreement, which was incapable of performance within one year, is barred by the statute of frauds. Because we conclude that it is barred, we affirm the trial court’s order granting summary judgment and entering final judgment in favor of Kalex Construction and Development, Inc. (“Kalex”).
The salient facts are as follows. Rosa LaRue (“LaRue”) sued Kalex for breach of contract and for an accounting. It is uncontested that LaRue agreed in November 2005 to leave her employer, Florida Power & Light, where she was earning $103,000 annually, and to accept a position with Kalex as a vice-president with a starting annual salary of $140,000 plus substantial benefits, including a company truck, cell
Section 725.01, Florida Statutes (2010) (“the statute of frauds”), provides in pertinent part:
No action shall be brought ... upon any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of 1 year from the making thereof ... unless the agreement or promise upon which such action shall be brought, or some note or memorandum thereof shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith or by some other person by her or him thereunto lawfully authorized.
The statute of frauds was enacted to prevent fraud and the enforcement of claims based on loose verbal statements made faulty by the lapse of time, and as the Florida Supreme Court stated in Yates v. Ball,
The statute of frauds grew out of a purpose to intercept the frequency and success of actions based on nothing more than loose verbal statements or mere innuendos. To accomplish this, the statute requires that all actions based on agreements for longer than one year must depend on a written statement or memorandum, signed by the party to be charged. The statute should be strictly construed to prevent the fraud it was designed to correct, and so long as it can be made to effectuate this purpose, courts should be reluctant to take cases from its protection.
Over time, questions arose as to whether the doctrine of promissory estoppel should apply and the effect of partial and full performance of an oral contract. In Tanenbaum v. Biscayne Osteopathic Hospital, Inc.,
Where the contract is for the sale of land and the relief sought is for specific performance or other equitable relief, partial performance may remove an oral agreement from the statute of frauds. However, the doctrine of partial performance does not remove the bar of the statute of frauds for actions seeking damages based on the breach of an oral contract. See Hosp. Corp. of Am. v. Assocs. in Adolescent Psychiatry,
Full performance of an oral agreement, however, may remove the agreement from the statute of frauds if the agreement is capable of being performed within a year and was, in fact, performed within one year. For example, in Dobbs v. Gorlitz,
Where uncontroverted affidavits and deposition testimony submitted in support of a summary judgment motion showed that the defendant, a business owner, had in 1981 renewed an earlier oral promise to plaintiff, his employee, to give plaintiff ownership in the business upon defendant’s retirement in exchange for the plaintiff remaining in his employ, and that within the year defendant retired from the business and sold all his stock in the business to a third party, defendant had not demonstrated conclusively that plaintiff’s cause of action for breach of contract was barred by the statute of frauds. Summary judgment was, therefore, inappropriate. There was nothing in the terms of the oral agreement to show that it could not be performed within a year. Further, the fact that the defendant did sell his business interest within a year of the agreement is a strong factor weighing against construction of the agreement as one within the statute of frauds.
See also Grossman v. Levy’s,
The intent of the parties is a determinative factor. In Yates, the Florida Supreme Court noted that “to make a parol contract void, it must be apparent that it was the understanding of the parties that it was not to be performed within a year from the time it was made.” Yates,
[W]hen no time is agreed on for the complete performance of the contract, if from the object to be accomplished by it and the surrounding circumstances, it clearly appears that the parties intended that it should extend for a longer period than a year, it is within the statute of frauds, though it cannot be said that there is any impossibility preventing its performance within a year.
Id. at 344. Therefore, when an agreement is “susceptible of performance within a year, and the evidence shows that it was expected to have been performed within that time,” it is not barred by the statute of frauds. Id. at 344.
The following are examples of the application of this principle. In Hospital Corp. of America,
forcement of an oral contract that was intended by the parties to last longer than a year, even though the contract could have been terminated for cause within a year.” Similarly, the Fourth District found in Byam v. Klopcich,
Likewise, in Cabanas v. Womack & Bass,
In applying these principles to the instant case, it is clear that the trial court correctly determined that LaRue’s claims were barred by the statute of frauds. It is undisputed that LaRue’s complaint was based on an alleged oral employment agreement, and the agreement and the intent of the parties was that LaRue would receive a 25% ownership interest in the company if she worked for the company for three years. Because the alleged agreement was incapable of being performed in one year, her claim is barred by the statute of frauds.
In Collier, the First District noted that although there appears to be a trend towards eviscerating the statute of frauds,
is based upon public welfare and policy ... [and] [i]f Florida is to move toward enforcing oral promises intended to be performed beyond one year, or towards compensating those who enter into such agreement, it is the proper function of the Florida Legislature to announce that public policy change, not the function of a district court of appeal. While the Florida Supreme Court has occasionally chosen to depart from its own precedent on public policy grounds, we note that it frowns on such departures by lower courts.
Collier,
Affirmed.
