Marlinda Lowe challenges the circuit court’s order compelling Ms. Lowe to arbitrate her claims against Nissan of Brandon, Inc., d/b/a Autonation Nissan Bran-, don. We .affirm; we write to explain our reasoning and to certify conflict with existing cases addressing similar issues.
I. Facts
As relevant to this appeal, Ms. Lowe executed three separate documents when she purchased her vehicle from Nissan of Brandon: a Retail Purchase Agreement (Purchase Agreement), a Retail Installment Sale Contract (Installment Contract), and an Arbitration Agreement. Her complaint below was filed as a class action; she alleged, in pertinent part, that Nissan’s inclusion of $98.75 in the purchase price of the vehicle—itemized on the Purchase Agreement as a “Tag Agency/Electronic Filing Fee” (Fee)—violates' Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (FDUTPA) and that the Fee constitutes unjust enrichment. The Purchase Agreement included a specific line-item charge for the Fee, and Ms. Lowe alleged that the Installment Contract included the Fee in the line-item “Cash Price” for the vehicle. Ms. Lowe’s claims are solely based upon the $98.75 Fee,
The Purchase Agreement provides that “Agreement" means the Purchase Agreement together with “any documents, incorporated into this Agreement by reference, whether such reference is made in the Agreement or the document itself.” It also provides, in paragraph ten, that “[t]he front and back of this Agreement and any documents incorporated herein by reference comprise the entire agreement .affecting this sale. You agree to sign any and all documents necessary to complete the terms of this sale.” (Emphasis added.) Further, paragraph ten expressly .incorporates the Arbitration Agreement: “If you have executed an Arbitration Agreement in conjunction with this Agreement such Arbitration Agreement shall be incorporat-. ed herein by reference and made a part of this Agreement.”
Paragraph fifteen of the Purchase Agreement states that the Agreement “shall survive the consummation of your purchase of the vehicle.” Paragraph sixteen provides that the Purchase Agreement is not binding on Nissan until “accepted by [Nissan’s] authorized manager, and if a credit purchase (1) appropriate financing disclosures are made and (2) a retail installment contract and purchase money security agreement is executed by you and [Nissan].” Paragraph sixteen further provides: “If this Agreement is part of a credit purchase, this offer is only an offer to purchase the vehicle .... A credit purchase is subject to credit approval of a third party financing institution and acceptance of the retail installment contract by a financing institution.”
The sole and exclusive venue for any dispute or litigation arising under or concerning this Agreement shall be the courts located in and for the county in which [Nissan] is located, and the parties irrevocably consent to the jurisdiction óf said courts. Any and all arbitration proceedings shall also take place in the county where [Nissan] is located, unless agreed otherwise by the parties. ... In the event of any dispute or litigation arising under or concerning this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be entitled to recover its costs and expenses including court costs and reasonable attorney’s fees.
Finally, paragraph nineteen of the Purchase Agreement provides that if the “sale of the vehicle described in this Agreement is conditioned upon an agreement by a third party financing institution (‘finance institution’) to purchase the retail installment contract entered into between you and [Nissan] (‘contract’) and if [Nissan] cannot sell the contract to a finance institution within a reasonable: time period ... [Nissan] may ... cancel the contract.”
The pertinent'terms of the Installment Contract include that the “Seller-Creditor” is Nissan and the merger clause: “This contract contains the entire agreement between you and [Nissan]' relating to this contract. Any change to this contract must be in writing and [Nissan] must 'sign it.” (Emphasis added.) The Installment Contract also provides that “if [Nissan] is unable to assign this contract within [the time period stated to assign the contract] to any one of the financial institutions with whom [Nissan] regularly does business under an assignment acceptable to [Nissan], [Nissan] may cancel this contract.”
The third pertinent document executed by Ms. Lowe was the Arbitration Agreement. By its. terms, the Arbitration Agreement applies to “customers” who purchase a vehicle. It defines “customer/dealership dealings” as “reviewing, negotiation or executing any documents or agreement during the course of interactions with the dealership.” The Arbitration. Agreement also provides that “arbitration will be the sole method of resolving any elaim, dispute, or controversy (collectively, ‘claims) that either party has arising from Customer/Dealership Dealings.” It then presents five groupings of' claims to which arbitration applies. Finally, ' the Arbitration Agreement states that it is “entered into contemporaneously' with your Retail Installment Sale Contract.” ■
Upon being served with Ms. Lowe’s complaint, Nissan filed á motion to compel arbitration and to stay, the case, contending that the Arbitration Agreement controlled Ms. Lowe’s claims. The court held a hearing and ultimately entered an order granting the motion to compel arbitration and staying the court case. The circuit court found that “agreements and documents signed at or near the same time and as part of the same transaction should be read and construed together,” citing Phoenix Motor Co. v. Desert Diamond Players Club, Inc.,
As she. did, below, Ms. Lowe contends that the merger clause in the Installment
II. Analysis
“[T]he existence of a valid agreement to arbitrate is a question of law, [and] we review the trial court’s determination de novo.” Avatar Props., Inc. v. Greetham,
Ms. Lowe contends that two cases are directly on point and require reversal: HHH Motors, LLP v. Holt,
In HHH Motors, the retail purchase agreement contained an arbitration provision as well as a clause stating that the purchaser agreed to execute all additional contracts and any retail installment sales contract required.
Importantly, the claims against HHH Motors were for violations of FDUTPA “relating to electronic titling/registration filing fees that HHH Motors charge[d] its customers.” Id. at 747. However, the court did not discuss whether or how the claims, at issue might determine whether there was an agreement to arbitrate those claims. Ms. Lowe raises FDUTPA claims seemingly identical to those raised in HHH Motors; her claims rest on the $98.75 Fee charged by Nissan which is only identified in the Purchase Agreement.
In Duval Motors, the retail buyer’s order contained the same conditional language regarding the retail installment sales contract that our Purchase Agreement
The Duval Motors court reiterated the general rule that “evidence outside the contract language, which is known as parol evidence, may be considered only when the contract language contains a latent ambiguity.” Id. at 265. It further stated that “[t]he purpose of a merger clause is ‘to affirm the parties’ intent to have the parol evidence rule applied to their contracts.’ ” Id. (quoting Centennial Mortg., Inc. v. SG/SC Ltd.,
Ms. Lowe relies on the HHH Motors and Duval Motors cases for their holdings based on the retail installment sales contracts’ merger clauses. Neither HHH Motors nor Duval Motors- indicates that .the respective purchase agreement also contained a merger clause nor that the purchase agreement was otherwise only an offer to purchase until the retail installment sales contract was executed, at which time the purchase agreement would become a binding contract. Further, neither HHH Motors nor Duval Motors indicates that the respective purchase agreement included an' incorporation by reference
Because both the Purchase Agreement and the Installment Contract in this case identify as contracts and contain merger provisions, but only one of them incorporates the Arbitration Agreement, we must determine which of the two documents is the operative contract.
The general contract principle regarding construing contemporaneously executed documents together has been reiterated in many cases. See, e.g., Dodge City,
To incorporate by reference a collateral ■document, the incorporating document must (1) specifically provide “ ‘that it is subject to the incorporated [collateral] document’ ” and (2) -the collateral document to be incorporated must be “ ‘sufficiently described or referred to in the incorporating agreement’” so that the intent of the parties may be ascertained, Kantner v. Boutin,624 So.2d 779 , 781 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993) (quoting Hurwitz v. C.G.J. Corp.,168 So.2d 84 , 87 (Fla. 3d DCA 1964)). The [s]upreme [c]ourt set forth the second requirement for incorporation by reference in OBS Co. v. Pace Construction Corp.,558 So.2d 404 , 406 (Fla. 1990): “It is a generally accepted rule of contract law that, where a writing expressly refers to and sufficiently describes another document, that other document, or so much of it as is referred to, is to'be interpreted as part of the writing.”
BGT Grp., Inc. ,v. Tradewinds Engine Servs., LLC,
In our case, although there is no indication of the order in which the documents were executed, there is no dispute that the documents were executed contemporaneously. And given the express language of the documents and the fact that Ms. Lowe purchased the vehicle through credit, the Purchase Agreement was only an offer to purchase until she executed the Installment Contract;. further, the purchase was subject to the condition that the Installment Contract be accepted by a financing institution. The Installment Contract’s execution, was a condition precedent to the formation of the Purchase Agreement. The Installment Contract does not reference arbitration or the Purchase Agreement;. nor does it include an incorporation by reference clause or othei’wise
That the Installment Contract contained a merger clause is not determinative; the law remains that “the existence of a merger clause does not per se establish that the integration of the agreement is total.” Duval Motors,
Further, the merger clause of the Installment Contract at issue here mandates that the Installment Contract controls “this contract”—the financing terms and conditions contract. Cf. HHH Motors,
not the subsequent participation interests to which.the merger clause applied”). “The test for determining arbitrability of a particular claim, under a broad arbitration provision is whether a ‘significant relationship’ exists between the claim and the agreement containing the arbitration clause, regardless of the legal label, attached to the dispute.” Murphy v. Courtesy Ford, LLC, 944 So.2d. 1131, 1133 (Fla. 3d DCA 2006) (quoting Seifert,
Ms.. Lowe specifically challenges part of the sale price of the vehicle. Regardless of whether she financed the purchase or paid cash, the Fee she is challenging remains the same. And while Ms. Lowe claims that the Fee was incorporated into the sale price of the vehicle as listed in the Installment Contract, without the Purchase Agreement she cannot establish the necessary facts to proceed on her claims. But see HHH Motors,
Affirmed; conflict certified.
Notes
. Neither party has otherwise contested the language of the Purchase Agreement.
