Carr-Gottstein Foods Co. v. WASILLA, LLC

182 P.3d 1131, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 69, 2008 WL 2066458
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 2008
DocketS-12010
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 182 P.3d 1131 (Carr-Gottstein Foods Co. v. WASILLA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr-Gottstein Foods Co. v. WASILLA, LLC, 182 P.3d 1131, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 69, 2008 WL 2066458 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Approximately six years after a supermarket relocated a stand-alone liquor store to the supermarket's premises, the supermarket's landlord claimed that the move constituted a breach of the supermarket's lease. The superior court agreed. We reverse because the landlord's lengthy silence and other acts constituted a waiver of its right to insist on strict performance of the lease with respect to the relocation.

H. FACTS

In the 1950s Larry Carr opened his first Carrs grocery store and Oaken Keg liquor *1133 store. He expanded the businesses and in the 1970s merged them with Barney Gott stein's wholesale company. Thereafter several Carr-Gottstein companies were created, including Carr-Gottstein Properties (CG Properties), a real estate development company, and LABAR Co., a partnership. At all times relevant to this case CG Properties managed the commercial real estate owned by Carr-Gottstein entities, including LA-BAR.

One of the properties LABAR owned was the Wasilla Shopping Center. A Carrs supermarket and an Oaken Keg liquor store were two of the tenants in the Wasilla Shopping Center, and a Carr-Gottstein company owned them, too. The supermarket was in the main building of the shopping center while the liquor store was in a smaller, satellite building. In 1990 an investment group headed by Leonard Green bought the Carrs supermarkets and Oaken Keg liquor stores, but not the real estate on which they were located. LABAR remained the landlord of the Wasilla Shopping Center. The Green-controlled corporation that owned Carrs supermarkets after 1990 was eventually named Carr-Gottstein Foods Co. (CG Foods). The Oaken Keg stores were owned by Oaken Keg Spirit Shops, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of CG Foods. >

As part of the sale, the supermarket lease for the Wasilla Shopping Center was renegotiated. Its term was twenty years subject to four successive renewal options of five years each at the option of the tenant. The liquor store lease of the satellite building was to expire in 1995. The use clause of the supermarket lease provided that the tenant would use the premises "for the principal purpose of conducting thereon a general food supermarket." It permitted the sale of items sold "in other general food supermarkets." Another clause of the supermarket lease prohibited the tenant from subleasing the premises without landlord consent.

Because Alaska law had disallowed grocery stores from selling liquor, Oaken Keg stores, including the one in the Wasilla Shopping Center, were physically separate from Carrs stores. In 1998 the Alcohol Beverage Control Board modified its interpretation of state liquor laws to permit closer physical proximity between retail establishments and liquor stores. In 1996, after the liquor store lease expired, CG Foods moved the liquor store in the Wasilla Shopping Center into part of the premises previously occupied by the supermarket. This relocation required physical alterations to the supermarket premises, including glass partitions and doors separating the liquor store from the supermarket. Electrical modifications were also made. CG Foods did not seek or obtain permission for the relocation from CG Properties. But CG Properties was aware of the relocation and made no objection that the relocation would violate either the use clause or the sublease clause. Denali Commercial Management, Inc., described as CG Properties' "management arm" with respect to the shopping center, facilitated the relocation by bidding on and billing for some of the electrical work required by the move-Denali billed CG Foods some $20,000 for electrical work. 1 After the relocation CG Properties required Oaken Keg's sales figures to be reported separately, but combined them with the supermarket's sales figures for the purpose of calculating whether percentage rent should be charged. 2

In 1998 LABAR transferred ownership of the Wasilla Shopping Center to another Carr-Gottstein entity, Wasilla LLC. Wasilla LLC was also managed by CG Properties and in this opinion our reference to CG Properties should be understood to include both LABAR and Wasilla LLC.

In 1998 Wasilla LLC borrowed a large amount of money from a third party, using the Wasilla Shopping Center as security. In connection with this transaction, Robert *1134 Mintz, CG Properties' general manager, signed a sworn statement that the leases in the shopping center were not in default.

In 1999 Green's investment group sold CG Foods to Safeway. As part of this transaction, Safeway asked about possible Habilities that CG Foods might have and sought estop-pel certificates from CG Properties that would declare that there were no defaults under CG Foods leases except as stated. 3 CG Properties did not state that CG Foods was in default under the lease, but refused to sign the certificates. In February 2002, approximately six years after the relocation of the liquor store, CG Properties wrote Safeway that it considered the move to be a breach of the supermarket lease.

III. PROCEEDINGS

A few months later CG Properties, acting through Wasilla LLC, brought this action against Safeway, CG Foods, and Oaken Keg Spirit Shops, Inc. (collectively Safeway). The complaint alleged that "several years ago" the liquor store had been relocated to a partitioned area of the supermarket without CG Properties' consent and that this violated the lease's use and sublease clauses. CG Properties sought declaratory relief and a permanent injunction preventing Safeway from operating an Oaken Keg liquor store on the supermarket premises.

Safeway answered and pled affirmative defenses including waiver, estoppel, and laches. CG Properties then filed an amended complaint, adding a claim for damages. Extensive motion practice and discovery followed.

CG Properties moved for partial summary judgment seeking a ruling that CG Foods had violated the use and sublease clauses. According to CG Properties, the use clause was understood by the parties to exclude the sale of liquor. Further, CG Properties argued that the sublease clause of the lease, which prohibited CG Foods from allowing "others" to use any part of the leased space without the landlord's written consent, included wholly owned subsidiaries of CG Foods.

Safeway opposed the motion for summary judgment and cross-moved for summary relief. It argued that the use clause permitted the sale of liquor from within the supermarket premises. Safeway also argued that the sublease to Oaken Keg was not a breach of the lease because Oaken Keg was a wholly owned subsidiary of CG Foods and the parties treated the two corporations as a single entity. Both as to the use clause and the sublease clause, Safeway argued further that the parties' course of performance supported Safeway's interpretation of the lease. In addition, Safeway argued that CG Properties had waived its right to contend that Safeway was in breach of the use and sublease clauses because of CG Properties' long acquiescence in the move and its conduct and statements relating to the absence of defaults.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P.3d 1131, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 69, 2008 WL 2066458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-gottstein-foods-co-v-wasilla-llc-alaska-2008.