Matter of Daben Corp.

469 F. Supp. 135, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13515
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 26, 1979
DocketCiv. 78-2531
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 469 F. Supp. 135 (Matter of Daben Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Daben Corp., 469 F. Supp. 135, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13515 (prd 1979).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

TOLEDO, Chief Judge.

Debtor Daben Corporation (“Daben”), has appealed before this Court the Bankruptcy Court’s Order of November 8, 1978, entitied: “Order re Claims No. 41 and 126”, pursuant to Rule 809 of the Rules for Bankruptcy Procedure. Daben is a merchandiser on children’s wear and GEM de Puerto Rico, Inc. (“GEM”) the creditor, operates several department stores in San Juan metropolitan area. On May 3, 1963, and at undetermined dates thereafter, the parties entered substantially identical agreements termed “license agreements”, whereby Daben was granted a “license” to operate a children’s department in space belonging to GEM at three different locations in Puerto Rico: Norte Shopping Center, San Juan; Laguna Shopping Center, Carolina; and Altamira Shopping Center, Guaynabo. The contracts for all three locations, 1 in standard printed forms, are substantially the same. José Dávila Correa & Co., apparently a predecessor company to Daben, appears as the licensee in the 1963 agreement, the only one in the record. We shall assume that Daben has been substituted therein for all effects.

On September 24, 1976, Daben filed a petition under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act. On November 29, 1976, GEM filed Claim No. 41, for $43,445.60, amended on May 23, 1978, by Claim No. 126, for $123,-994.11. The latter amount included $90,-382.48 for administrative rents; this portion of the claim was separated by the Bankruptcy Judge for a separate hearing. Another $28,448.63 was claimed by GEM under Section 64(a)(5) of the Bankruptcy Act. As appellee has accepted, this amount was subject to a set-off of $14,400 (security deposited by appellant). The amount of $14,048.63 was allowed by the Bankruptcy Court in the “Order re Claims Nos. 41 and 126” and debtor was ordered to pay said amount. That is the Order that Daben is presently appealing. Daben contends: (1) the agreement between debtor and creditor, purportedly a “lease” contract was actually a license, and is thus deprived of the protection afforded by Section 64(a)(5), Title 11, United States Code, Section 104(a)(5) of the *139 Bankruptcy Act 2 ; (2) even assuming that the agreement was a lease, the provisions of the Puerto Rico Civil Code invoked by appellees are not presently in force; thus there does not exist a “state law” on which priority under Section 64(a)(5) can be recognized.

The contract between Daben and GEM entitled “License Agreement”, provided as follows in its preamble:

“Whereas the. parties recognize that the success of GEM will be affected by Licensee’s observance of such merchandising policies, standards, an$ practices as GEM shall formulate from time to time and that any deviation therefrom by Licensee will adversely affect the operators of all other departments in said building and expose them to the risk of damage and injury.”

Licensee was to sell only the following merchandise, termed “department goods”: “[ijnfants and children’s wearing apparel; girls through sub-teens, boys six to twenty size range. All juvenile furniture, (preamble). The “licensee” was granted a “license”

“to operate such a (children’s) department in said building during the term thereof, in the department space assigned thereto by GEM from time to time, and to utilize in connection therewith the reserve stock or warehouse space assigned from time to time, hereafter collectively referred to as “subject premises”, subject to and upon the following covenants and conditions . . . ” (emphasis supplied).

The “license” was of indefinite duration (Par. 1) and licensee was to pay no rent, but rather a “percentage license fee” fixed at 10%% of gross sales (for the department space) and $1.25 per square foot for warehouse space “assigned from time to time”. (Par. 2(A), 2(B). Licensee had to pay a “concurrent fee” of $2,150 as security in each of the contracts, (Par. 2). The agreement imposed a series of obligations on licensee: (1) to include all transactions in sales books prescribed by GEM, (Par. 3); (2) to furnish GEM, at the close of the business day, a carbon copy of each sale or transaction (id.); (3) to purchase from GEM, one or more recording, receipting, and locked-in cash registers; licensee would process therewith all sales and transactions; permit GEM to inspect the registers at any time, and furnish GEM with recordings as it shall desire therefrom (id.); (4) to maintain complete records and books of account according to generally accepted accounting principles and procedures, (Par. 4); (5) to furnish GEM with computations of gross sales upon request as well as of initial and realized mark-ups by merchandise classification, operating expenses, inventories, and such other information relating to the operation of the department as GEM shall specify; (6) not to create a ‘‘good will account” in its balance sheet and not to attribute to fixtures, equipment or other property a greater value than loss less accumulated depreciation (id.); (7) to deliver to “licensor”, at the end of each fiscal year, a profit and loss statement of operations (id.); (8) to permit inspection by GEM or accountants appointed by it at any time during the life of the agreement and until one year after its expiration (id.); (9) to equip the department store space allotted as GEM deems proper; remodeling of the department requires GEM’s written consent, (Pr. 5); (10) to maintain a full, stable inventory, attractively displayed, (Par. 6); (11) to conduct sales only when and if GEM approves (id.); (12) to staff the department with adequate personnel (id.); (13) to comply with GEM’s labor policies (id.); (14) to discontinue sale of any merchandise intended to be handled elsewhere in the building (id.); (15) to operate the department in full harmony with all policies and standards prescribed by GEM from time to time (id.); (16) to maintain adequate and sufficient inventory in order *140 to achieve maximum sales volume (Par. 7(a)); (17) to maintain lower prices than the competition within the particular store’s trading area, by as wide a margin as possible, (Pr. 7(b)); (18) not knowingly offer for sale goods at an equal or higher price than the competition, the determination of the store’s general manager being conclusive as to all matters pertaining to Paragraphs 7(a) and 7(b) (id.); (19) to sell only to persons eligible, according to GEM rules and regulations, to enter the store and effect purchases (Par. 8); (20) to use the GEM name, but Daben could not pledge the credit of GEM or incur in any liability on its behalf (Par. 13); (21) to permit quality testing of goods sold (Par. 14).

GEM was to have exclusive control over advertising, sale, and promotion of merchandise or services (Par. 16) and was authorized to directly solicit cooperative advertising allowances to be used in connection with GEM’s advertising program (Par. 16). If licensee ceased operations, whether or not either of the parties had notified termination, GEM had the unilateral option of removing all furniture, fixtures, other equipment and merchandise (Par. 25). GEM could negotiate labor contracts at its discretion, with only advisory participation by licensees (Par. 29).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 F. Supp. 135, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-daben-corp-prd-1979.