Keller v. West-Morr Investors, Ltd.

770 S.W.2d 543, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 7, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 770 S.W.2d 543 (Keller v. West-Morr Investors, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. West-Morr Investors, Ltd., 770 S.W.2d 543, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 770 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

SANDERS, Presiding Judge (Eastern Section).

Plaintiff-Appellee, Mary Keller, was awarded a judgment for lost profits resulting from alleged fraudulent or neglectful representation by the Defendant, which induced her to enter into a lease contract. The Defendant-Appellant, West-Morr Investors, Ltd., has appealed, presenting the issues before us for consideration.

The Defendant, West-Morr Investors, Ltd., (hereinafter West-Morr) is the owner of a shopping center in West Hamblen County. The shopping center was developed by its predecessor in title, PBM Developers (hereinafter PBM) in 1980. Mr. Don Matthews was the leasing agent for PBM and is also the leasing agent for West-Morr. As pertinent here, in 1981 PBM, through its leasing agent, Dan Matthews, leased a space in the shopping center to the Defendant-Appellee, Rite-Aid of Tennessee, Inc. (hereinafter Rite-Aid) for the purpose of operating a full-line drugstore. He also leased a number of other spaces to other business establishments including Winn-Dixie Super Market.

In August, 1985, there was a vacancy in the shopping center which was leased by Don Matthews as the leasing agent for West-Morr to the Plaintiff-Appellee, Mary Keller, for a movie and VCR tape rental house. The Plaintiff moved into the premises and engaged in the business of renting movie tapes and VCR machines. Soon after the Plaintiff began operations she learned Winn-Dixie was renting tapes. Upon becoming aware of this she contacted Mr. Matthews and solicited his assistance to get Winn-Dixie to discontinue renting tapes. It was her position that she had the exclusive right to rent tapes in the shopping center. In due time Winn-Dixie discontinued renting tapes. However, in April, 1986, the Defendant-Appellee, Rite-Aid, began renting tapes in the shopping center. Again the Plaintiff called upon Mr. Matthews to have Rite-Aid stop renting tapes, but Rite-Aid refused to do so and that precipitated this litigation.

In her complaint the Plaintiff alleged that West-Morr, through its agent, Don Matthews, as an inducement to lease the property, represented to her she would have the only store or business in the shopping center selling, leasing or renting VCR recorders and tapes. She insisted the leasing of tapes by Rite-Aid was a violation of her lease agreement and relied upon the following paragraph of her lease:

Restrictions Upon Further Leasing: During the term of this Lease and any extended term thereof, neither the Lessor nor any persons or entity driving [sic] title to any property through Lessor or having an ownership interest in the Shopping Center shall rent, lease or give occupancy of any other property now or hereafter owned or controlled by or leased to them for use as a movie and VCR rental [545]*545house within a two thousand foot radius of the Shopping Center.

Upon an amendment to her complaint she alleged Don Matthews, as agent of West-Morr, falsely and fraudulently and with intent to deceive her, represented to her that if she leased the space she would be the only store or business in the shopping center selling, leasing or renting VCR recorders and tapes.

The Plaintiff asked for injunctive relief restricting Rite-Aid from leasing or renting VCR machines or tapes in the shopping center during the term of her lease. She also asked for damages against both of the Defendants.

For answer, Defendant West-Morr denied it had made any false misrepresentations to the Plaintiff. It also denied the Plaintiff was entitled to any affirmative relief against it.

Before the case was set for trial Rite-Aid closed its store in the shopping center and the suit as to it was dismissed. However, West-Morr then filed a third-party complaint against Rite-Aid asking it have a judgment over against Rite-Aid for any amount the Plaintiff might recover against it.

Upon the trial of the case the chancellor found the issues in favor of the Plaintiff and awarded her damages against West-Morr in the amount of $25,287. He also found Rite-Aid had not violated the covenant in the Plaintiffs lease by renting tapes and dismissed West-Morr’s third-party action against Rite-Aid.

West-Morr has appealed, presenting the following issues for review:

I. Whether the alleged oral representations of a leasing agent to a prospective tenant that no other tenant in the shopping center would be renting videotapes, gives rise to a cause of action for negligent misrepresentation where a prior tenant’s lease agreement allowed such tenant to use space in the shopping center for the sale of items commonly sold in a full-line drug store?
II. Whether an award of damages was proper when the records of the claimant do not permit reliance thereon and the award is based on the alleged lost gross profits of the claimant?
III.Whether a lease agreement, drafted by the lessee, allowing the lessee “to use the Premises for the sale of health and beauty aids and/or for the sale of any or all items commonly sold in full-line drug stores” allows such lessee the right to rent videotapes?

While we find ourselves in agreement with the chancellor in his determination of the case as it relates to issues I and III, we cannot agree with the chancellor on his award of damages. The chancellor filed an excellent memorandum opinion. Since we concur for the most part in the conclusions reached by the chancellor and find the evidence in the record supports these conclusions, we incorporate a pertinent part of the memorandum opinion as follows:

“Plaintiff premises her suit against defendant on two theories: breach of covenant in her lease contract with defendant and misrepresentations that induced her to enter into that lease contract. It appears that plaintiff cannot prevail upon her first theory. Paragraph 23 of her lease reads as follows: [Here the chancellor repeated the paragraph in Plaintiffs lease which is quoted on page 3 of this opinion.]

“The context of this paragraph reveals that it is prospective in application only. Its title or heading indicates that there are certain restrictions on further leasing. The language of the paragraph itself indicates that the Lessor shall not rent to any other person any of the premises which is to be used as tape rental establishment. There is no way that this paragraph can be read as an express covenant that none of the existing tenants have the authority to rent videotapes. Inasmuch as the offending tenant, Rite-Aid, had a lease that predated plaintiff’s, there was no breach of the right of exclusivity granted in Paragraph 23 of plaintiff’s lease since it was prospective in effect. However, the Court finds that the plaintiff, during negotiations with the leasing agent, specifically asked him if any other tenants then rented, or could in the future rent, videotapes and [546]*546that the agent responded in the negative. Since plaintiffs sole business was the renting of videotapes, competition within the same shopping center was a matter of great concern to her and any competition, or even the potential for competition, would have dissuaded her from executing the lease. In other words, had plaintiff realized that other tenants located in the center at that time could rent videotapes, she would not have entered into her lease with the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 S.W.2d 543, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-west-morr-investors-ltd-tennctapp-1988.