BOYNTON BEACH, FL — The landlord of the Boynton Beach Marketplace shopping center has filed a civil lawsuit in Palm Beach County Circuit Court against the tenant company that took over the lease for an Orangetheory Fitness studio, alleging the tenant stopped paying rent this spring and vacated the space, according to a newly filed complaint.
Boynton Beach Marketplace, LLC, the Delaware-registered landlord of the shopping center at 7395 and 7499 Boynton Beach Blvd., sued SFR OT, LLC, another Delaware limited liability company, in a complaint filed June 29, 2026. Court records list the case as Boynton Beach Marketplace, LLC v. SFR OT, LLC, Case No. 502026CA007274XXXAMB, assigned to Division AE of the 15th Judicial Circuit in and for Palm Beach County.
The complaint centers on a lease for a fitness studio space at the shopping center. According to the complaint, the plaintiff and the original tenant, OTF Property Holdings, LLC, executed a lease on or about September 6, 2023, for approximately 2,805 square feet of retail space. The lease attached to the complaint identifies the trade name for the space as Orangetheory Fitness.
The complaint states that on or about October 21, 2024, the lease was assigned to SFR OT, LLC under an Assignment and Assumption of Lease Agreement, under which the defendant took on the rights and obligations of the tenant.
The lawsuit alleges the defendant breached and defaulted on its obligations under the lease in two ways. First, according to the complaint, the tenant failed to pay rent as it came due, and specifically owes $42,451.19 in unpaid rent for April and May 2026. The filing frames that as an Event of Default under Section 14.01(a)(i) of the lease.
Second, the complaint alleges the tenant vacated or abandoned the premises as of March 29, 2026, which the lawsuit describes as a separate Event of Default under Section 14.01(a)(iv).
Based on those alleged defaults, the complaint claims the landlord is entitled to all available remedies under the lease and Florida law, including accelerated rent under Section 14.02(f). Accelerated rent provisions in commercial leases generally allow a landlord to seek future rent that would otherwise come due over the remaining lease term, subject to the terms of the agreement and applicable law.
The complaint pleads a single count for damages. The lawsuit seeks damages in excess of $50,000, the jurisdictional threshold for the circuit court, and asks the court to enter a judgment for compensatory damages that include accelerated rent, prejudgment interest, court costs, and reasonable attorney fees, along with any other relief the court finds appropriate.
Attorney David W. Black of Frank Weinberg & Black, P.L., in Plantation filed the complaint on behalf of Boynton Beach Marketplace, LLC. The complaint does not include a jury demand. The lease attached to the complaint includes a jury trial waiver in Section 16.27.
The claims are allegations made in a civil court filing and have not been proven in court. The filing reviewed by Boca Post does not include a response from the defendant.
Boca Post reviewed the complaint, Boynton Beach Marketplace, LLC v. SFR OT, LLC, Case No. 502026CA007274XXXAMB, filed June 29, 2026, in the 15th Judicial Circuit in and for Palm Beach County, Florida.
The case is newly filed. No hearings, responses, or further motions were listed in the reviewed filing.
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