ALTENBERND, Judge.
The appellants, collectively referred to as "Spring Lake," appeal an order denying their motion to compel arbitration in a wrongful death action arising from Jessie V. Holloway's stay at Spring Lake's rehabilitation center. The trial court refused to enforce the arbitration agreement that
The facts involved in this case are not complex. Ms. Holloway was a resident at the Spring Lake rehabilitation center from August 20, 2010, to January 4, 2011. When she entered the facility, she executed a standard resident admission and financial agreement and a separate arbitration agreement. At the time, she was 92 years old and had a fourth-grade education. She could not spell well and often had to sound out words while reading. She had memory problems and was increasingly confused. There is no evidence that the admissions staff at Spring Lake used any improper methods to obtain Ms. Holloway's signature or that she was misled in any fashion.
The trial court declined to find that Ms. Holloway was incompetent or incapacitated to enter into a contract at the time of her admittance. It was persuaded, however, that the contracts were so complex that she could not possibly have understood what she was signing. Accordingly, it ruled that there was no meeting of the minds between the parties and that the arbitration clause was unenforceable.
We have little doubt that the trial court correctly assessed Ms. Holloway's ability to understand these documents. For better or worse, her limited abilities are not a basis to prevent the enforceability of this contract. In a very similar case, this court explained:
Rocky Creek Ret. Props., Inc. v. Estate of Fox ex rel. Bank of Am., N.A., 19 So.3d 1105, 1108 (Fla. 2d DCA 2009); see also SA-PG Sun City Ctr., LLC v. Kennedy, 79 So.3d 916, 920 (Fla. 2d DCA 2012) (reaffirming that a party's alleged inability to understand an agreement does not vitiate her assent to that agreement in the absence
As a practical matter, a significant percentage of the people who enter nursing homes and rehabilitation centers have mental or physical limitations that make it difficult for them to understand the agreements signed at admittance. The agreements are sufficiently complex that many able-bodied adults would not fully understand the agreements. The same is probably true for most of the contracts that we sign for many consumer services and even for the agreements clients sign when they hire attorneys.
There was a time when most contracts were individually negotiated and handwritten. In that period, perhaps the law could adequately describe a mutual agreement as a "meeting of the minds" between the parties. But a literal "meeting of the minds," requiring both parties to have a comparable, subjective understanding of their agreement is clearly not what the courts intend by the use of this phrase. Our modern economy simply could not function if a "meeting of the minds" required individualized understanding of all aspects of the typical standardized contract that is now signed without any expectation that the terms will actually be negotiated between the parties.
We note that the issue addressed in Spring Lake NC, LLC v. Figueroa, 104 So.3d 1211 (Fla. 2d DCA 2012), has also been raised in this appeal. That issue was not the basis of the trial court's ruling, and we do not reach the issue today.
Reversed and remanded.
NORTHCUTT and MORRIS, JJ., Concur.