Wе consider whether the common practice of paying real estate commissions contingent on consummation of the sale violates the public policy of this state when applied to a purchase or sale by the government. In the decision we review, the Third District Court of Appeal invalidated such an arrangement, concluding that "contracts which provide for contingency awards for securing public monies are against public policy." Act Realty Co. v.Rotemi Realty, Inc.,
After meeting with the director, Martin-Hidalgo contacted another broker, Jose Perez-Urrutia of Rotemi Realty. Perez-Urrutia had previously dealt with and claimed tо be "good friends" with the individuals who controlled both properties. Together these brokers, whose companies are the petitioners in this case, met with the owner of Act Realty and entered into a written brokerage agreement. The agreement provided that if the brokers procured a sale of Act Realty's property to the School District within a specified period they would receive a commission "equal to the amount of the sales proceeds due the owner at closing that is over $1,000,000." Martin-Hidalgo faxed to the School District a separate letter authorizing the brokers to negotiate the sale.
The brokers then attempted to sell the ten-acre tract to the School District. Martin-Hidalgo spoke repeatedly with the District's real estate director and also discussed the property with its appraisers. The first offer went through her. At the recommendation of the other broker, Perez-Urrutia, Act Realty conducted the remainder of the price negotiations jointly *1184 with Cease, who controlled the fifty-acre parcel. Perez-Urrutia claims that he was responsible for maintaining the relationship between the two sellers.
Even before the brokers became involved, however, the School District already had an interest in the two adjacent properties. According to Kathryn Wilbur, the School District's director of government affairs and land use policy and acquisitions, those properties represented "the only site within the area" that was suitable for a new high school. A memorandum issued by Wilbur, and later approved by the regional superintendent, stated that the School District wished to acquire Cease's fifty acres and "would also prefer that the middle 10 acres be acquired, if possible." In fact, the School District ordered an appraisal of the properties two days before the brokеrs approached Act Realty.
The School District eventually purchased both properties at a uniform rate per acre. The selling price for the ten-acre parcel was $1,164,650.50. Before the closing, the brokers were informed that Cease had paid a lobbyist to persuade school board members to approve the transaction. Although the brokers claimed not to have known about the lobbyist, they agreed to use $20,000 of their commissiоn to pay the lobbyist (the lobbyist's fee, which was not contingent on a sale, is not at issue here). After subtracting the $20,000, the proceeds from the sale of Act Realty's property still exceeded the $1 million mark by $144,650.50. The brokers claimed they were entitled to this amount as a commission. Act Realty contested their claim. The escrow agent therefore filed an interpleader action. The brokers and Act Realty filed cross-complaints, and eventually the trial court сonducted a non-jury trial.
At trial, Act Realty argued that the brokers were not the procuring cause of the sale and thus were not entitled to a commission. The trial court disagreed and entered judgment for the brokers. In its order, the trial court explained that the brokers "clearly established that they were the procuring cause of the sale and brought the parties together resulting in the sale of the real property." According to the court, the brokers "provеd that they initiated the negotiations, took affirmative action to bring the buyer and seller together, and that the transaction was closed and they were entitled to the agreed commission."
On appeal, the Third District reversed and remanded. ActRealty Co.,
Judge Cope dissented. Id. at 338,
In Robert Co., the plaintiff agreed to assist the defendant in securing an engineering contract with the City of Tampa.
We derived the "general rule" in Robert Co. from two earlier decisions. The first was Edwards v. Miami Transit Co.,
Twenty-five years after Robert Co., the Legislature enacted a law — section
To the contrary, we believe the difference is substantial. Real еstate brokerage agreements involving single-family homes, commercial businesses, and even government property all have a long history of contingency fees. Flat-fee real estate brokerage agreements are virtually unheard of. As Judge Cope stated in dissent below,
Act Realty,It should be obvious that it is permissible for a landowner to hire a real estate broker to sell the owner's land, and to compensate the broker by a commission in the event the reаl estate broker procures a sale. It makes no difference whether the buyer is a public agency or a private person. There is *1187 nothing inherently illegal about such an arrangement.
A person having something to sell has the right to sell it through an agent, and this right is an incident to his ownership. To declare that he may not employ an agent, upon commission, where the government is the prospective buyer, is to take away what is ordinarily one of the elements of the enjoyment of ownership — the unrestricted right to sell. Upon this line of reasoning, commission agreements for a sale to the government have been upheld and enforced in this state where the agreement did not actively require corruption in its performance. Treated as a matter distinct in its nature from agreements to procure legislation, an agreement to compensate an agent for his successful efforts in traffic with the government has been held binding, where unfairness in the dealings or an intention to resort to corruption did not actually appear from the facts.
7 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 16:5, at 357-58 (4th ed. 1997) (footnote omitted). The repercussions for the real estate sales industry from a holding that such contracts suddenly violate public policy as applied to purchases (and, by extension, sales) by government agencies wоuld be unpredictable.
Regardless of the differences between real estate brokerage agreements and those mentioned in section
Act Realty also relies on section
The preceding analysis indicates that, while the Legislature has created exceptions to the "general rule" of Robert Co., it has left the core of the rulе intact. We, too, leave the rule as it is. The doctrine of stare decisis counsels us to follow our precedents unless there has been "a significant change in circumstances after the adoption of the legal rule, or . . . an error in legal analysis." Dorsey v. State,
The general rule continues to be that "an employment in which compensation is contingent on success in securing contracts from public officials is not illegal on its face," but rather is illegal only if shown at trial to involve "favors or corrupt means." Robert Co.,
Many Florida courts, over a long period of time, have discussed the requirements for "procuring" a real estate sale. SeeOsheroff v. Rauch Weaver Millsaps Co.,
Interpreting Taylor, the district courts have recognized that to earn a commission a broker must perform two essential tasks: First, the broker must "initiate negotiations by doing some affirmative act to bring buyer and seller together." Ehringer v.Brookfield Assocs.,
We conclude that competent, substantial evidence supports thе trial court's finding that the brokers procured the sale of Act Realty's property to the School District. The record shows that the brokers initiated negotiations by faxing to the School District a letter authorizing them to negotiate the sale of Act Realty's property. At that point, the School District had already developed an interest in Act Realty's property, but had not yet contacted Act Realty to begin negotiations. In fact, Act Realty's owner testified thаt he "did not know that the School Board was interested" in his property when he met with the brokers. The brokers' fax was the "affirmative act" setting in motion the negotiations between Act Realty and the School District.Ehringer,
The record also shows that the brokers remained "involved in the continuing negotiations." Siegel,
It is so ordered.
PARIENTE, C.J., and WELLS, ANSTEAD, LEWIS, QUINCE and BELL, JJ., concur.
