Frederick Business Properties Co. v. Peoples Drug Stores, Inc.

445 S.E.2d 176, 191 W. Va. 235, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 60
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1994
Docket21806
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 445 S.E.2d 176 (Frederick Business Properties Co. v. Peoples Drug Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frederick Business Properties Co. v. Peoples Drug Stores, Inc., 445 S.E.2d 176, 191 W. Va. 235, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 60 (W. Va. 1994).

Opinion

BROTHERTON, Chief Justice:

In this case, we are asked to determine whether a commercial lease agreement contained an express or implied covenant of continuous use which obligated the appellee, Peoples Drug Stores, Inc., to continue to operate its drug store on the demised premises during the lease term and to pay percentage rentals to the appellant, Frederick Business Properties Company.

An agreed statement of facts submitted by the parties explains that on March 31, 1965, Del Ankers and John Manfuseo, Jr., as lessors, and Peoples Drug Stores, Inc., a West Virginia corporation, as lessee, entered into a fifteen-year lease agreement for a one-story storeroom at the Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center, Martinsburg, West Virginia. Peoples Drug subsequently extended the lease agreement, in accordance with its terms, for *237 two periods of five years each, resulting in a final expiration date of October 31, 1990.

Frederick Business Properties Company was not a party to, nor privy to, the negotiations which resulted in the execution of the original March 31, 1965, lease agreement. That agreement required the use of the demised premises only for the conduct of a drug store and also provided that the tenant, Peoples Drug, made no representation or warranty as to the sales it expected to make in the leased premises.

On April 1,1988, Frederick Business Properties Company, a Maryland corporation authorized to do business in West Virginia, purchased the Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center and the lease agreement. Peoples Drug was neither a party to, nor made privy to, any of the negotiations leading up to and resulting in the sale of Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center and the lease agreement.

On April 25, 1988, Peoples Drug entered into a lease agreement with a business partnership that is not party to this litigation and leased premises at the Olde Courthouse Square Shopping Center, Martinsburg, West Virginia, which is located between one-half and one mile from the Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center.

Peoples Drug continued to operate its drug store at the Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center until September 11, 1988, at which time Peoples Drug ceased operations at the demised premises and moved to the new leased premises. Under the terms of the lease agreement at issue in this case, Peoples Drug was obligated to pay annual or minimum rent in the amount of $18,900. Peoples Drug fully paid this rent through October 31, 1990, when the second renewal term expired.

Peoples Drug was also contractually obligated to pay as “percentage rent” a sum equal to the amount by which 3.5% of all gross sales exceeded the annual rent paid during the lease year, if any. Peoples Drug paid percentage rent in accordance with a computation formula provided in the lease agreement for sales at the demised premises until and including a payment for lease year 1988. Payment records belonging to Peoples Drug for lease years 1982 through 1988, along with its net sales figures for lease years 1985 through 1988, are the only sales and payment data available to the parties herein, and are as follows:

Total Rent
Lease Paid (Includes Year Minimum Rent)
1982 $48,333.64
1983 $63,662.31
1984 $59,232.14
1985 $63,007.94
1986 $66,044.06
1987 $71,262.73
1988 $51,829.26
Percentage
Rent Paid Net Sales
$29,433.64 .
$34,792.31
$40,332.14 .
$44,107.94 $1,800,227
$47,144.06 $1,886,973
$52,362.75 $2,036,078
$32,929.26 $1,480,836

The parties herein never discussed renegotiating the lease agreement for a term to begin following the expiration of the lease’s second renewal term, which expired on October 31, 1990.

Peoples Drug maintains that its decision to cease business operations at the demised premises was based upon projections of less favorable economic conditions at that location in the future, including declining sales, growth, and profits, and rising costs, because of changing market conditions relating to the Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center, including customer flow and mix, tenant mix, the closing of other businesses in the shopping center, and incidents of crime and vandalism in the shopping center area.

Frederick Business Properties contends that when Peoples Drug relocated its drug store to the Olde Courthouse Square Shopping Center, it diverted sales from the demised premises, resulting in economic harm to Frederick Business Properties.

On August 17, 1990, Frederick Business Properties Company filed suit against Peoples Drug in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, West Virginia, seeking damages for an alleged breach of the commercial lease agreement. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment which focused on the issue of whether the lease agreement contained an express or implied covenant of continuous use, thereby obligating the appel-lee to continue to operate its drug store on the demised premises during the lease term and to pay the appellant percentage rentals due.

*238 In an order entered December 17, 1990, the trial court stated that “the application of the. lease agreement between these parties involves a legal issue, not one involving questions of fact....” The court noted that it anticipated a further hearing on a motion for summary judgment.

That hearing was held on June 17, 1991. Thereafter, the trial court concluded that “the lease agreement at issue does not contain either an express or an implied covenant which required the Defendant to operate a drug store at the Berkeley Plaza Shopping Center, Martinsburg, West Virginia until October 31, 1990.” The court also found that “there is no requirement, either express or implied, in the lease agreement at issue providing that a relocated business be used for the payment of percentage rent to the Plaintiff.” By order entered June 27, 1991, the trial court adopted the parties’ agreed statement of facts, denied the appellant’s motion for summary judgment, and answered the questions of law jointly submitted by counsel as follows:

Question 1: Whether the subject lease agreement contains a covenant which requires Defendant to continue to operate or to continuously operate a drug store on the demised premises until October 31, 1990, when the second renewal term expired. Answer by the Court: No.

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Bluebook (online)
445 S.E.2d 176, 191 W. Va. 235, 1994 W. Va. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-business-properties-co-v-peoples-drug-stores-inc-wva-1994.