Kroger Co. v. Chemical Securities Co.

526 S.W.2d 468, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 602
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 526 S.W.2d 468 (Kroger Co. v. Chemical Securities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kroger Co. v. Chemical Securities Co., 526 S.W.2d 468, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 602 (Tenn. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

BROCK, Justice.

This case involves the construction of a shopping center lease to ascertain whether it contains an implied covenant by the tenant to occupy and operate a supermarket on the premises and an implied prohibition against subleasing to a nongrocery enterprise and without permission.

The Madison Square Shopping Center in Madison, Davidson County, Tennessee, was opened to the public in 1956. Located on thirty acres of land, the shopping center is comprised of seven buildings and a parking lot for 2500 vehicles. Forty-six independent businesses occupy the 343,000 square feet enclosed in the buildings.

The Kroger Company was among the original tenants of the shopping center; it entered a lease on January 1, 1956, with Madison Square Shopping Center, Inc., for an area at the end of the largest building and opened a supermarket. The leases of several other original tenants required the landlord to acquire a minimum ten year lease for a Kroger supermarket.

In 1962 Kroger threatened to close the grocery store and move out of the shopping center to larger accommodations; whereupon the landlord agreed to expend $100,-000.00 for improvements requested by the tenant. The money was spent to remodel and enlarge the Kroger store by 50%.

At that time Mr. John Dyson, real estate manager for Kroger in Nashville, and Mr. W. H. Criswell, the agent for the shopping center, negotiated a new lease. According to Mr. Dyson, Mr. Criswell was known as the dean of real estate men and the leading shopping center negotiator in Nashville at the time. “He had the reputation of being an extremely tough negotiator.”

The new lease was signed on June 5, 1962. The rental under this lease is $2,812.50 per month plus one percent of the tenant’s annual sales in excess of $3,375,-000.00. The base rental is high and has comprised the entire rental under this lease because Kroger’s sales never achieved the sum necessary for an override payment. The term of the lease is ten years, and the tenant has the option to make three renewals of five years each. Due to a subsequent lease modification the ten year term commenced on November 1, 1963, and expired on October 31,1973. The only express proscriptions in the lease on the tenant’s use of the premises are that he not use them in an unlawful manner and that he not use them for a drugstore without written approval of the landlord. The landlord promised not to lease any premises for the sale of groceries within 1000 feet of the Kroger store, except one small corner store previously occupied *470 by A & P Grocery. The lease states that its provisions shall bind and benefit the parties and their heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns. There is no clause in the lease concerning the right of the tenant to assign or sublet, but clause 26h provides that if the tenant voluntarily vacates the premises and they remain vacant for one year, the landlord has the right to cancel the lease and re-enter the premises.

On July 1,1965, Chemical Securities Company, the plaintiff in this case, purchased all the real estate, store leases, and other assets of Madison Square Shopping Center, Inc., and the latter corporation was dissolved.

On July 16, 1973, shortly before the conclusion of the ten year term, Kroger entered into a sublease with Genesco, Inc., for the store, and on September 29 vacated the premises. According to Kroger the primary reason for the move was the declining sales at the supermarket. The subtenant assumed all of Kroger’s obligations under the prime lease; the term of the sublease is equal to the three remaining extension periods of fifteen years and the subtenant’s rental of $2,812.50 per month, to be paid to Kroger, is the same as the base rental under the prime lease.. Genesco agreed not to assign or sublease the property without the consent of Kroger. The subtenant’s use of the premises is limited to the sale of shoes, clothing and general merchandise, and he agreed not to use the premises in any manner which would compete with Kroger’s business. The record reveals that Kroger operates another supermarket in Rivergate Shopping Center several miles away. The record also discloses that Winn-Dixie Louisville, Inc., has indicated to Chemical Securities Company that it is interested in leasing the Kroger store and opening a supermarket.

On September 19,1973, the landlord filed a complaint in Chancery Court against the tenant and the subtenant claiming that Kroger’s sublease of the property to Genes-co for use as a commissary was inconsistent with the terms of the prime lease and a breach of the tenant’s implied warranty to occupy the premises. The complaint requested a temporary injunction enjoining the transfer of the premises to Genesco during the pendency of the action, and that the sublease be annulled. The complainant further prayed that the prime lease be terminated or that the tenant be permanently enjoined from subleasing its premises to a nonretail grocery store and without prior approval of the landlord.

The Chancellor granted the temporary injunction and after a full hearing of the cause he found the prime lease vague and uncertain and admitted extrinsic evidence as to its meaning. He was particularly impressed by evidence of the cooperative nature of a shopping center operation and evidence of the essential role of a large grocery store in the economic success of the Madison Square Shopping Center. In his view Kroger could have vacated the premises without any further obligations but chose instead to sublease the premises at no profit to a nongrocery enterprise in order to lessen competition with its Rivergate Store. The Chancellor concluded that the intention of the parties to the prime lease was for the tenant to occupy and operate a grocery store on the demised premises and not to sublet. He ordered that the sublease be declared void and the prime lease terminated.

The Court of Appeals affirmed, finding the lease to be vague with respect to subletting. It concluded from evidence of the surrounding circumstances that if the subject of subletting by Kroger to a nongro-cery operation had been mentioned the lessor would have insisted upon a covenant against subleasing without its permission and Kroger would have agreed. It also concluded that Kroger was guilty of bad faith in prohibiting its subtenant from going into the retail grocery business and that such bad faith warranted forfeiture of the prime lease as well as annulment of the sublease.

*471 Whereupon, Kroger and Geneseo petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari which was granted.

The petitioners argue first that the Court of Appeals erred in admitting and considering evidence of circumstances surrounding the execution of the lease. We disagree.

In Jeffers v. Hawn, 186 Tenn. 530, 212 S.W.2d 368 (1948), this Court stated:

“While this lease contract cannot be varied by oral evidence ‘the course of previous dealings, the circumstances in which the contract was made, and the situation of the parties as aids in determining the meaning of the contract — are matters proper to be looked to by the court in arriving at the intention of the parties to the contract.’ Southern Pub. Ass’n v. Clements Paper Co., 139 Tenn. 429, 432, 201 S.W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.2d 468, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kroger-co-v-chemical-securities-co-tenn-1975.