In this case we must decide whether the sheriff of
Background. The material, undisputed facts are as follows.
The general conditions in Form CM 11 provide that the contract is “subject to the availability of an appropriation therefor,” and inсludes a termination provision in § 8.4 that states:
“This Contract may be terminated at any time for the*487 convenience of the City at the option of the Official by delivering or mailing to the Contractor at the Contractor’s business address a written notice of termination setting forth the date, not less than seven (7) days after the date of such delivery or mailing, when such termination shall be effective.”
The RFP recognizes the possibility of a conflict between its express terms and the forms it incorрorated (Forms CM 10 and 11), as well as amendments to the RFP and “Proposer Response Content,” and specifies how any such conflicts should be resolved. Under this contractual order of preference, the RFP terms took precedence, followed by Form CM 11, and then by Form CM 10.
In response to the RFP, Morton Street tendered a proposal on March 9, 2000, offering to lease space in an office building at 113-123 Morton Street in thе Jamaica Plain section of Boston. Morton Street and the sheriff then engaged in negotiations for the lease of office space in these premises, which resulted in the execution of a lease on June 1, 2000.
Under the lease, the sheriff agreed to lease the office space for ten years, commencing on the delivery of the premises to the sheriff when Morton Street’s required improvements were substаntially completed. The lease does not include any provision giving the sheriff or the city the right to terminate the lease with seven days’ notice “for the convenience of the City.” Indeed, the lease provides that, if the sheriff were to fail to pay the required fixed or additional rent, Morton Street, after giving the sheriff written notice and thirty days to cure its default, was entitled to repossess the premises and to be indemnified by the shеriff for any loss of rent it may suffer during the remaining term of the lease. The lease, however, expressly states: “This Lease is subject to the City of Boston and its Law Department’s approval of the contract between the City of Boston and Landlord, which approval Tenant shall seek to secure as promptly as reasonably possible.” The lease further provides that, if the tenant, despite its diligent efforts, were unable tо obtain the city’s approval, “the obligations of each party hereto will terminate and be of no further force or effect.”
The sheriff occupied the leased premises for three years. During that timе period, the entire cost of the lease was paid from funds provided by the Administrative Office of the Trial Court’s office of community corrections (OCC). However, OCC was not able to continue to fund the lease into the fourth lease year,
Morton Street filed a motion for partial summary judgment, contending that the lease provided for a ten-year term and did not permit early termination. The sheriff filed a cross motion for summary judgment asserting that (1) the lease was void under § 12 (b) of the Uniform Procurement Act (Act), G. L. c. 30B, because it exceeded three years in duration without the requisite authorization by a majority of the county commissioners
Discussion. Morton Street was given fair warning in the RFP that it would need to accept the general conditions in Form CM 11 as part of any contractual agreement with the sheriff if its proposal were accepted. Morton Street contends that it had no fair warning because it was not provided with a copy of Form CM 10 or Form CM 11 as “Attachment C” to the RFP.
Contrary to Morton Street’s argument, the ten-year lease term requested in the RFP is not in conflict with the termination provision in Form CM 11, so the RFP need not take precedence as to termination. While the RFP seeks at least a ten-year lease term, it does not speak of termination. When read together with Form CM 11, which thе RFP expressly incorporates and which sets forth an unambiguous termination provision, the RFP seeks a lease for at least ten years that would be terminable with seven days’ notice by the designated official “for the convenience of the City.”
The lease later negotiated between the sheriff and Morton Street, while it did not initially incorporate the general conditions in Form CM 11, provided that the lease was null and void without the city’s approval. It was soon made clear to Morton Street that the city’s approval was conditioned on Morton Street’s execution of Forms CM 10 and 11, which gave the sheriff a right of termination on seven days’ notice that had not been provided in the lease and which declared that the lease was “subject to the availability of an appropriation therefor.” Morton Street executed Form CM 10, with the gеneral conditions as stated in Form CM 11, knowing that the terms of the general conditions of this standard contract modified the lease provision regarding termination. Morton Street, however, understood that its oral agreement with Sweeney, later memorialized in writing by Sullivan’s cover letter, made Form CM 11 effectively “meaningless.” Morton Street contends that this prior oral agreement with the sheriff’s procurement team leader supersedes the plain language of the written standard contract it later executed and that, essentially, the sheriff should be estopped from enforcing a termination provision that her agent orally agreed would not be binding.
We have been “reluctant to apply principles of estoppel to public entities where to do so would negate requirements of law
Here, the oral agreement made by Sweeney was not contrary to any statute or regulation, but it was contrary to a written agreement soon to be entered into by the sheriff, Morton Street, and the city. The application of estoppel principles would be equally inappropriate here. To permit a private party, through a prior oral agreement with a government official, to nullify a subsequent written contract with a governmental entity would invite confusion and uncertainty in public contracting and endanger the public fisc. See Stadium Manor, Inc. v. Division of Admin. Law Appeals,
“The reliance of the party seeking the benefit of estoppel must have been reasonable.” O’Blenes v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals
Nor do the facts of this case equitably cry out for this court to overcome its historic reluctance to apply principles of estoppel to public entities. Morton Street executed a standard contract with the city knowing that the city required the contract to be executed before it would issue checks for the monthly lease payments. Under the oral agreement it made with Sweeney, the city would have continued to issue these checks, believing that Morton Street, by signing the standard contract, had accepted the general conditions when, in fact, Morton Street had rejected the termination provision of those general conditions. To grant estoppel here would mean enforcing an oral agreement whose sole purpose was to mislead the city.
Morton Street further contends that the sheriff could not terminate the lease pursuant to the termination clause because that clause permits termination only “for the convenience of the City,” and not for the convenience of the sheriff. Morton Street ignores the language that follows that phrase, which provides that termination is permissible “at any time for the convenience of thе City at the option of the Official” (emphasis added). “Official” is a defined term in Form CM 11, meaning “the awarding authority/officer acting on behalf of the City in the execution of the Contract.”
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Debbie, LLC, is the current owner of the premises subject to the lease, and is the successor to Morton Street LLC’s interest in the lease. We refer to Morton Street LLC and Debbie, LLC, collectively as Morton Street.
Because we are reviewing the allowancе of summary judgment in favor of the sheriff, where facts are in dispute, we accept the version set forth by the losing party, here, Morton Street. See Graham v. Quincy Food Serv. Employees Ass’n & Hosp., Library & Pub. Employees Union,
The community corrections facility was intended to be (and was) used as a women’s resource center, “a nonresidential, administrative custody program for female offenders [providing] educational, employment and counseling services.”
In connection with the sheriff’s requеst for proposal (RFP), the city of Boston (city) and Suffolk County issued a separate RFP for the benefit of the sheriff “for [the provision of] goods and services and performing . . . work.” This separate RFP is not at issue in this case.
While the city apparently provides only approximately five per cent of the
Charles Sullivan also noted that the total amount of rent to be paid over the ten-year term of the lease was in error on the standard contract, because the lease provided for the annual rent to be adjusted at the beginning of each successive lease year bаsed on changes in the consumer price index, but the amount stated in the standard contract assumed no adjustments during the ten years.
At the time, the sheriff was grappling with difficult budgetary issues, including a $5.4 million deficit for fiscal year 2003, with fiscal year 2004 looting equally bleak. The $5.4 million deficit for fiscal year 2003 derived in part from the settlement of a large Federal tort action against the sheriff. Payment in accordance with the settlement had been due since November, 2002, interest was accruing, and the settlement had not been fully funded by the Commonwealth.
General Laws c. 30B, § 12 (b), provides in part: “Unless authorized by majority vote [here, of the county commissioners], a procurement officer shall not award a contract for a term exceeding three years . . . .”
General Laws c. 30B, § 12 (a), provides in part: “The procurement officer shall not enter into a contract unless funds are availаble for the first fiscal year at the time of contracting. Payment and performance obligation for succeeding fiscal years shall depend on the availability and appropriation of funds.”
This case does not represent the first occasion we have reviewed the sheriff’s decision to terminate a lease. In Bradston Assocs., LLC v. Suffolk County Sheriff’s Dep’t,
A “[glovemmental body” under the Uniform Procurement Act is defined as “a city, town, district, regional school district, county, or agency, board, commission, authority, department or instrumentality of a city, town, district, regional school district оr county.” G. L. c. 30B, § 2. Morton Street contends that the sheriff’s department is “a long-standing public entity, independent of both Suffolk County and the City of Boston and therefore outside the scope of G. L. c. 30B.”
Our conclusion also obviates the need to resolve Morton Street’s contention that the sheriff’s statutory defenses under G. L. c. 30B, § 12, were waived because they were not pleaded as affirmative defenses in the sheriff’s answer.
The city is also a defined term in Form CM 11, meaning “the City of Boston or the County of Suffolk.”
