Mark Shillington, LP v. Price Chopper

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 4, 2025
Docket1486 MDA 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mark Shillington, LP v. Price Chopper (Mark Shillington, LP v. Price Chopper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark Shillington, LP v. Price Chopper, (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S26002-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

MARK SHILLINGTON, L.P. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : PRICE CHOPPER OPERATING : No. 1486 MDA 2024 COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA INC. :

Appeal from the Order Entered September 23, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County Civil Division at No(s): 8246-C of 2002

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., OLSON, J., and BECK, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, P.J.: FILED: SEPTEMBER 4, 2025

Mark Shillington, L.P., (Shillington) appeals from the order, entered in

the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, granting the motion for

summary judgment filed by Appellee, Price Chopper Operating Company of

Pennsylvania (Price Chopper) and denying Shillington’s cross-motion for

summary judgment in this breach of lease case. We affirm.

Kingston Plaza1 was a one-story commercial shopping center located on

Third Avenue in Kingston, Luzerne County. The shopping center included,

among other things, various restaurants and retail clothing stores.2 On

____________________________________________

1 Light Acadia 11-89, LLC (Light Acadia) is the fee simple owner of Kingston

Plaza. Light Acadia is not a party to this action.

2 Kingston Plaza no longer exists; it is now the site of the Sidney and Pauline

Friedman Jewish Community Center. J-S26002-25

January 15, 1980, Village Supermarket, Inc. (Village)3 entered into an

agreement (Agreement) with Kingston Plaza, Inc., one of the original landlords

of the shopping center. The Agreement provided that Village (operating as a

ShopRite supermarket) would be the anchor tenant of the shopping center

and lease a 45,000 square-foot space (Premises) of Kingston Plaza. See

Indenture of Lease, 1/15/80, at 1. Village paid a fixed annual rent of

$235,000.00. Pursuant to the Agreement, the lease term “shall commence

on the date hereof and shall continue to and include the date which is twenty-

five (25) years after the Rent Commencement Date (as hereinafter defined)[4]

if the Rent Commencement Date is the first day of a month, or twenty-five

(25) years after the last day of the month in which the Rent Commencement

3 Village is a grocery store company that operates a chain of 25 supermarkets

in New Jersey and Pennsylvania under the franchised name, ShopRite. See https://www.company-histories.com/Village-Super-Market-Inc-Company- History.html (last visited 7/30/25).

4 The term “Rent Commencement Date” (RCD) is defined, in the Agreement,

as follows:

The [RCD], as used herein, shall be the earlier to occur of the following dates: (i) the date of Delivery of Possession, as hereinbefore defined (subject to extension if and for such period as Tenant is not required to accept such Delivery of Possession under the terms of paragraph 5D; or (ii) the date of the opening by Tenant of its store on the Demised Premises for business with the public.

Id. at 15. The parties do not dispute that the RCD, as defined in the Agreement, was December 2, 1981, and that the lease term expired on December 2, 2006. See Appellant’s Brief, at 7; Appellee’s Brief, at 5.

-2- J-S26002-25

Date occurs if the Rent Commencement Date is not the first day of a month[.]”

Id. at 2.

Any assignment or subletting under the Agreement was controlled by

the following provisions:

A. Subject only to limitations hereinafter set forth in this paragraph[], the [] Premises may be used by the Tenant as a supermarket selling those items found in supermarkets of its type in metropolitan New York or Pennsylvania.

(1) No use or operation of the [] Premises by any permitted assignee or subtenant that is different from a supermarket use shall violate or be in conflict with a then[-]outstanding leasing commitment made by Landlord to a tenant of any other space in the Shopping Center restricting the uses permitted therein who is then in, or thereafter takes, occupancy of such space in accordance with such commitment, provided, however, that Landlord shall, within fifteen (15) days after request from Tenant, furnish to Tenant a list of any such commitments or restrictions then outstanding, identifying the tenants benefitting therefrom.

(2) Tenant will not permit any act to be done or any condition to exist on the [] Premises or any part thereof or any article to be brought thereon which is or may be deemed to be dangerous unless the same shall be safeguarded as required by law, or which may, in law, constitute a public or private nuisance, or which may make void or voidable any insurance required by this Lease to be carried by Tenant with respect to the [] Premises, unless Tenant can replace such insurance.

B. Subject to the conditions hereinafter set forth in this paragraph[], and to the suspension and/or termination of operation occasions by reason of condemnation or casualty to the Tenant Improvements or other portions of the Shopping Center as set forth elsewhere in this Lease, the [] Premises shall be kept open to the public for the conduct of business as a food supermarket (i) under the “Shop[]Rite” trade name, in accordance with the policies established for the operation of all similar stores under that trade name for a continuous

-3- J-S26002-25

period of ten (10) years next following the [RCD] (the “Continuous Operations Period”). Tenant agrees that during the Continuous Operations Period, Tenant will not assign, mortgage, pledge, sublet[,] or encumber the Lease, the whole or any part of the [] Premises or permit any other person to occupy the whole or any part of the [] Premises.

Id. at 16 (emphasis added).5 Finally, the Agreement contained the following

restrictive covenant:

A. During the term of this Lease, unless Tenant has theretofore discontinued conducting business at the Demised Premises or has ceased to operate the Demised Premises as a food supermarket, Landlord agrees not to use, let or sublet or to permit the use, letting or subletting of any other store, in the Shopping Center, (i) for any noxious or offensive uses; (ii) for manufacturing or for use as a bowling alley, funeral parlor, card club, warehouse[,] or offices (except for office or warehouse use incidental to a permitted retail use or for banks, finance companies and the like); or (iii) for a food supermarket selling food for off- premises consumption. The term “food supermarket” shall not, for the purposes of this Lease (but without limiting those other retail uses which would not be considered to fall within the term “food supermarket”), be deemed to include restaurants, whether “take- out” or otherwise, including by way of illustration and not limitation, pizza shops, steak shops, sandwich shops, Chinese restaurants, hamburger restaurants (such as, by way of illustration and not limitation, McDonald’s, Gino’s and Burger King type restaurants), health food restaurants[,] and ice cream parlors.

Id. at 54-55 (emphasis added).

On December 9, 1992, Village “assigned its interest in the Lease to []

Price Chopper by means of an Assignment and Assumption of Lease and

Subleases dated November 9, 1992 . . . for a fixed annual rent [of] ____________________________________________

5 Tenants were permitted, under the Agreement, to extend the lease term for

four consecutive five-year terms (Renewal Period), under the same terms and conditions of the original lease. See Indenture of Lease, 1/15/80, at 3.

-4- J-S26002-25

$245,000[.].” See Third Amendment of Lease,6 12/15/92, at 1-2

(unpaginated); see also Appellant’s Brief, at 7 (“Price Chopper assumed the

obligations of the original tenant[, Village,] and the terms of the Lease through

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Mark Shillington, LP v. Price Chopper, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-shillington-lp-v-price-chopper-pasuperct-2025.