Cranes-Mayos Clothes, Inc. v. Street Road Shopping Center, Inc.

50 Pa. D. & C.2d 734, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 197
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedFebruary 17, 1970
Docketno. 472
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Pa. D. & C.2d 734 (Cranes-Mayos Clothes, Inc. v. Street Road Shopping Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cranes-Mayos Clothes, Inc. v. Street Road Shopping Center, Inc., 50 Pa. D. & C.2d 734, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 197 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

GARB, J.,

This is an action in equity in which plaintiff seeks injunctive relief against the various defendants together with damages allegedly incurred by plaintiff as the result of the asserted conduct of the various defendants. Upon the filing of the complaint and entry of order of this court, a hearing was held on January 8,1969, for the purpose of determining whether a special injunction should issue. At the termination of the said hearing, the application for special injunction was refused and denied, whereupon the various defendants filed answers to the complaint, two of the defendants filed new matter, to which plaintiff filed replies, and the pleadings thereupon being closed the matter was heard by this court on October 8, 1969. The various parties have filed requested findings of fact and conclusions of law, together with briefs, and based upon the foregoing we make the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff herein is Cranes-Mayos Clothes, Inc., (Cranes), a Delaware corporation, with principal offices located at 588 Broadway, New York, N. Y., and with a place of business located in Bucks County Mall, Feasterville, Bucks County, Pa.

[736]*7362. Defendant, Street Road Shopping Center, Inc., (Street Road), is a Pennsylvania corporation, with offices located in the Bucks County Mall, Feasterville, Bucks County, Pa.

3. Defendant, Santerian’s, a partnership, has a place of business located in the Bucks County Mall, Feasterville, Bucks County, Pa.

4. Defendant, John S. Milne, Inc., (Milne), is a Pennsylvania corporation, with a place of business located in the Bucks County Mall, Feasterville, Bucks County, Pa.

5. The Bucks County Mall is a shopping center developed and owned by defendant Street Road, located on Street Road approximately 800 feet east of the intersection of Street Road and Bustleton Pike, Feasterville, Bucks County, Pa., with approximately 900 front feet on Street Road and comprising approximately 36 stores.

6. On or about October 22, 1965, plaintiff and defendant, Street Road, entered into a written agreement, whereby defendant, Street Road, leased to plaintiff a store or store area, comprising approximately 3,500 square feet of space in the said shopping center, described as space no. 20, for a term of 15 years at an annual rental as set forth in the said lease agreement.

7. Among the various terms of the aforesaid lease agreement it was provided that plaintiff shall use the premises for the purpose of the retail sale of men’s apparel, including men’s suits, coats, shirts and related items, and shall use the leased premises solely for the purpose of conducting the business of a retail store for the sale of men’s and boys’ apparel, including haberdashery, sportswear, accessories and incidental men’s jewelry and related items.

8. Under section 3.01(a) of the aforesaid lease agreement it was provided, in relevant part, as follows:

[737]*737“Landlord covenants and agrees that it will not rent any space in the Shopping Center for which the demised premises form a part to any tenant whose business shall be the sale of men’s and boys’ apparel including haberdashery, sportswear, accessories, incidental jewelry and related items. Except that the Landlord may rent one other store having an area not in excess of 3,500 square feet for such purposes to other than Adams Clothes. This restriction shall not apply to the Variety Store, or any leases with any department stores, or any stores to be built on upper level, at a later Date.”

9. On or about September 1,1967, defendant, Street Road, did enter into an agreement with defendant Santerian’s under the terms of which a certain store area in the shopping center was leased to Santerian’s, and Santerian’s did begin operation of a retad store for the sale of wearing apparel on or about November 26, 1967.

10. Santerian’s is a store engaging in the sale of clothes for both men and women, boys and girls, infants and children, of a total store area of approximately 4,376 square feet, 400 feet of which is utilized for the purpose of the sale of men’s and boys’ clothing, and approximately 22 percent of the gross business of the entire store being derived from the sale of men’s and boys’ clothing.

11. Paragraph 31 of the Santerian’s lease provides as follows:

“Tenant shall use the leased premises solely for the purpose of conducting the business of retail sale of wearing apparel of all kinds and related items. It is agreed that the emphasis shall be on the sale of Children’s goods although ladies, men’s and young men’s wear of all kinds will be sold without reservation except for the following:
[738]*738“(a) The store shall not be advertised in such a way as to imply it is primarily a Ladies Apparel Store.
“(b) The portion of the store used in the sale of men s and young men’s wear shall not exceed two thousand five hundred (2,500) square feet.”

12. On or about August 13, 1968, defendant, Street Road, did enter into an agreement with defendant, Milne, for the lease of a certain store premises of approximately 2,000 square feet, being known as space no. 12 for a term of 15 years, at a rental stated therein and, pursuant thereto, Milne did begin the operation of a store for the sale of men’s and boys’ wear on or about November 1, 1968.

13. Under section 3.01 of the aforesaid lease between defendants, Street Road and Milne, it is provided, inter aha, as follows:

“Tenant shall use the leased premises solely for the purpose of conducting the business of: the sale of men’s and boys’ wear and accessories, provided that men’s sport coats shall not be sold of a quality lower than ‘Clothing make’ . . . The Tenant agrees that the type of store they will operate is that which is normally regarded as a ‘Better Men’s and Boys’ Wear shop.”

14. None of the foregoing lease agreements was lodged or entered of record in the Office for the Recording of Deeds by and for Bucks County.

15. Prior to the execution of their leases aforesaid, neither defendants, Santerian’s nor Milne, had any actual knowledge of the terms or conditions of the lease agreement entered into between plaintiff and defendant, Street Road.

DISCUSSION

For reasons that shall become apparent hereinafter, we find it unnecessary to analyze and attempt to [739]*739construe the specific language of the restrictive covenant in plaintiff’s lease. Suffice it to say that, conceivably, that language is capable of such construction as to find that neither Santerian’s nor Milne are in violation of it. The Milne store, having an area of less than 3,500 square feet, could well qualify as the one exception allowable by the restrictive covenant. Conceivably, Santerian’s is not in violation of the restrictive covenant if the language of the restrictive covenant ‘landlord covenants and agrees that it will not rent any space in the Shopping Center for which the demised premises form a part to any tenant whose business shall be the sale of men’s and boys’ apparel” is to be interpreted as a store the primary purpose of which is the sale of such apparel. It likewise might be a variety or department store.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Pa. D. & C.2d 734, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cranes-mayos-clothes-inc-v-street-road-shopping-center-inc-pactcomplbucks-1970.