Matteucci's Super Save, Drug v. Hustad Corporation

491 P.2d 705, 158 Mont. 311, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 375
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1971
Docket11998
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 491 P.2d 705 (Matteucci's Super Save, Drug v. Hustad Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matteucci's Super Save, Drug v. Hustad Corporation, 491 P.2d 705, 158 Mont. 311, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 375 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal of plaintiff’s claim, entered as a result of the granting of a motion for summary judgment in favor of defendants.

Plaintiff is Matteucci’s Super Save, Drug, a Montana corporation and will be referred to as Matteueci. Defendants include Hustad Corporation, a Montana corporation, called Hustad; Buttrey Foods, Inc., later merged with Jewel Companies, Inc., a New York Corporation; Oseo Drug, Inc., an Illinois corporation; and Oseo Drug Northwest, Inc., a Delaware corporation. The last three defendants will be referred to by name or as defendants.

Matteueci commenced the action in 1967 under the provisions of the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, sections 93-8901 through 93-8916, R.C.M.1947, seeking injunctive relief and damages against Hustad and Buttrey. Matteueci alleged a breach of restrictive covenant or exclusive on the part of Hustad and Buttrey; conspiracy on the part of Hustad and Buttrey; and, direct and conscious intermeddling on the part of Buttrey with certain contract relations between Mateucei and Hustad.

Subsequently after various procedural maneuvers, issue was joined and extensive discovery proceedings had. Upon comple *313 tion of discovery, defendants filed motion for summary judgment. On October 23, 1970, District Judge L. C. Gulbrandson presiding, entered findings of fact, conclusions of law and order granting summary judgment.

The briefs and a transcript on a hearing to correct and modify the record make much ado about certain facts, but we shall not discuss this feature since, in our view, those facts are not material to a determination of the issue.

Plaintiff, appellant here, urges some eight issues on appeal. Plaintiff groups these issues into four subjects (1) summary judgment, (2) whether an “exclusive” can have extraterritorial validity, (3) if so, whether the exclusive may be enforced against another lessee, and (4) the effect of closing plaintiff’s store.

The first two groups are determinative of this appeal. The litigation arose over the interpretation of an “exclusive clause” contained in a lease between Hustad, as lessor, and plaintiff, as lessee.

On May 5, 1956, Hustad entered into a written lease agreement with plaintiff whereby Hustad agreed to construct a store building on premises owned by it in the city of Helena, to wit, in Block 24 of the Loekey Addition, and to lease a portion of the floor area of such store building to Matteucci. The lease agreement was received in evidence, without objection, as Defendants’ Exhibit No. 1, consisting of 15 typewritten pages and 8 pages of plans and specifications, including the plot plan. The leased premises, as set forth in the lease agreement, are described as:

“* * * £ke following described premises, situated in the City of Helena, Lewis and Clark County, Montana, to-wit:
“A room approximately Forty feet (40’) by One Hundred Forty Feet (140’) in a building to be constructed in Block Twenty Four (24) of the Loekey Addition to the City of Helena, Montana, and to be located in said Block as shown by the plot plan hereinafter referred to.”

Paragraph 6 of the Matteucci-Hustad lease agreement provided in part:

*314 “* * * Lessor covenants and agrees that during the term hereof, Lessee shall have the exclusive right to operate a retail drug store upon the premises referred to herein and that no portion of the entire premises covered by the plans and specifications shall be leased or subleased to any other person, firm or corporation for such purpose. * * *”.

Paragraph 20 of the Matteucci-Hustad lease agreement provided in part:

“20. Representations; Relationship of Parties; Acceptance; Etc. (a) Lessor has made no representations, warranties or agreements regarding the premises or any building or improvements thereon, or any other representations, warranties or agreements, except as are expressly set forth in this Lease. * * *

Prior to, or contemporaneously with, the construction of the aforementioned store building on such premises, Buttrey entered into an agreement with Hustad, dated April 25, 1956, to lease a portion of the floor area of the store building. The leased premises, as set forth in the Buttrey-Hustad agreement, were described as:

“* * * following described premises, situated in the City of Helena, Lewis and Clark County, Montana, to wit:
“The retail food market consisting of approximately Fourteen Thousand (14,000) square feet to be constructed in Block Twenty-four (24) of the Loekey Addition to the City of Helena, Montana, and to be located in said Block as shown by the plot plan hereinafter referred to.”

Paragraph 6 of the 1956 Buttrey-Hustad lease agreement provided in part:

“6. USE OF PREMISES: Lessee shall use the demises [sic] premises only for the purpose of conducting therein a retail food market (including the merchandising of such miscellaneous goods, wares and merchandise as are commonly sold in retail food markets and are incidental to the principal business of conducting a retail food market). Lessor covenants and agrees that during the term thereof Lessee shall have the exclusive right to operate a retail food market upon the premises referred to herein *315 and that no portion of the entire premises covered by the plans and specifications shall be leased or subleased to any other person for that purpose * *

After execution of the leases and after the completion of the leased premises, both lessees, Matteueci and Buttrey, went into possession. They thereafter operated their respective businesses side by side within such store building, with an interior entrance way between the two stores, until the latter part of the year 1966.

All parties admit, among other things, that under its lease agreement of May 5, 1956 with Hustad, Matteueci was required to pay to Hustad the rental stipulated in paragraph 4 of the lease agreement, which includes both a fixed rental and a percentage rental. Hustad admits receipt of rents to February 1970. As of March 1,1970, Matteueci terminated its lease with Hustad, vacated the premises, and has since paid no rent. As of September 18, 1970, Hustad, in turn, terminated the lease with Matteucci. The premises are now occupied by Capital Sporting Goods & Western Wear.

About 1960, after several years of operation, Buttrey decided that in order to maintain its competitive position it would have to have larger premises than the premises which it occupied pursuant to its lease agreement of April 25, 1956 with Hustad. It appearing that the leased premises could not be enlarged because of physical and legal obstacles, Buttrey commenced a search for premises which would he large enough and adequate to house the operation of its store.

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Bluebook (online)
491 P.2d 705, 158 Mont. 311, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matteuccis-super-save-drug-v-hustad-corporation-mont-1971.