Max & Tookah Campbell Co. v. T. G. & Y. Stores

1981 OK CIV APP 2, 623 P.2d 1064, 1981 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 13, 1981
DocketNo. 52794
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1981 OK CIV APP 2 (Max & Tookah Campbell Co. v. T. G. & Y. Stores) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Max & Tookah Campbell Co. v. T. G. & Y. Stores, 1981 OK CIV APP 2, 623 P.2d 1064, 1981 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 107 (Okla. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Judge.

The owner of a shopping center filed this action seeking cancellation of a lease and an injunction prohibiting the lessee from “permitting” its sublessee to enter the leased premises. The trial court held a hearing “on Plaintiff’s Application for a Restraining Order, Temporary Injunction and Mandatory Injunction” and denied it. The shopping center appeals. We affirm.

I

In 1963, Southland Shopping Center, Inc.,1 executed a 20 year lease with T. G. & Y., a large variety store chain, covering nearly 18,000 square feet of floor space. It contained a provision for four automatic extensions of five years each at an annual rent of $42,355.56 or 4.33 percent of net sales on the premises, whichever is the greater amount.

The lease gave T. G. & Y. the right to assign or sublease the premises without Southland’s consent provided the assignment or sublease did not violate any “written exclusives” previously granted to other tenants in the center. Compliance with the proviso was to be accomplished in this manner: “Lessee shall notify Lessor in writing of its intention to assign or sublease and Lessor shall, within fifteen (15) days after receipt of said notice, furnish Lessee a certified list of the exclusives which are in effect on the date Lessor received said written notice.”

Another factor relevant to the controversy is that T. G. & Y. did not lease any of the exterior portion of the building, but one of the lease terms did permit the lessee to “erect on the exterior of the leased building, signs advertising its business, as shown [in the lease], which signs shall be erected and maintained in accordance with” local and state law at lessee’s expense.

T. G. & Y. occupied the premises until the spring of 1978. On May 30, 1978 it executed a sublease with Read’s of Oklahoma, Inc., a clothing store.

On June 22, 1978 Southland filed this lawsuit against T. G. & Y. alleging “that defendant has entered into a sublease with Reed’s [sic] Department Store and intends to permit it to enter the premises ... and operate a business different from a variety store .... Such sublease is in violation of the base lease ...; an operation of a department store by [Read’s] would do irreparable damage to the plaintiff.”

Pleading further, Southland alleged that the sublease contravened the terms of the base lease in two respects: (1) sublessee’s type of business (department store) is different from that of the base lessee (variety [1066]*1066store); and (2) subleasing the property to Read’s “contravenes commitments made by plaintiff’s predecessor to other tenants in the shopping center by prior leases.”

Southland, without explaining just how it would be irreparably injured by the Read’s sublease, asked the court to rescind2 the T. G. & Y. lease and enjoin defendant “from permitting Reed’s [sic] Department Store from entering the premises as sublessee.”

Five days later Read’s was permitted to intervene in the lawsuit and it filed an answer detailing the terms of the sublease which, it said, did not violate the primary lease.

The evidence, while conflicting in certain respects, consisted of undisputed operative facts. Joan Lepley, president and general manager of Southland,3 said two lease brokers came to her office in May of 1978 and told her they understood the T. G. & Y. space was for lease and they had someone interested in it.

“I told them that I was not aware,” said Lepley, “that I had heard conversations for probably a year that the space, that they wanted to give the space up, but I had not been notified.”

As a result of this information she contacted John Neale, manager of Read’s. “I called John Neale, because I had a letter from him dated back in April that they were interested in space in Southland,” she added.

The day before Lepley left to attend a shopping center convention in Atlanta, Georgia, she made it a point to again talk to Neale. “Mr. Neale and I made a verbal agreement in my office,” said Lepley, “[that] if I did find that T. G. & Y. definitely wanted to give the space up ... that he was interested in it. We reached a set rent on it, which he verbally agreed to .... It was four dollars and fifty cents a square foot plus a five percent overage.” 4

The rest of Southland’s case in chief centered around the “exclusive” rights provision of other tenants’ leases — J. C. Penney, Froug’s, Brown-Dunkin and Clarke’s. The gist of each lease was that lessor promised (1) to have a national variety store in the center and (2) not to “lease any space in the center or any expansion or enlargement thereof to any department store other than Froug’s, Brown-Dunkin[,] J. C. Penney” and Clarke’s (with regard to men’s wear).

Lepley stated that in her opinion occupancy of the T. G. & Y. space by Read’s instead of a variety store “would definitely create damage to the shopping center,” but admitted the amount or extent of such damage could not be estimated.

Neale denied making any kind of an oral agreement with Lepley, although he said he did talk to her about the T. G. & Y. space and determined she had no objection to Read’s occupying it. Later his father— head of Read’s — approached T. G. & Y. about a sublease.

Read’s further evidence was that before the sublease was executed T. G. & Y. wrote Lepley saying: “This is notice, in accordance with provisions set forth in Section entitled, ‘Sublease or Assign’ of lease dated March 20,1963, as amended, that T. G. & Y. Stores Co., intends to sublease the captioned store. Please furnish Lessee a list of written exclusives in effect this date.”

Lepley responded to this with a letter dated May 30, 1978 saying: “As per your [1067]*1067request of May 24 for a list of written exclusives presently in effect on the captioned store, the lease between J. C. Penney Company and Southland Shopping Center, Inc., includes the following ... ‘Landlord agrees that no portion of West Mall lying north of Central Mall nor any portion of the west 400 feet of Central Mall will be utilized for sales purposes of any kind without Tenant’s prior written approval.’ ”5 On the same day T. G. & Y. executed the sublease in question effective as of September 1, 1978 and terminating March 31, 1990. The sublease was subject to all the terms of the primary lease, including the obligation to pay Southland the same rent T. G. & Y. paid.

Upon learning of the sublease, Southland, through its attorney, Joe Francis, contacted both T. G. & Y. and Read’s and told them that the sublease violated the lease provisions of other center tenants. A few days later this action was filed.

II

Southland frames its first proposition thus: “In any event defendant is a trespasser with no right to install and maintain its sign on the exterior part of plaintiff’s shopping center.” Its supporting argument is that: (1) Read’s has no greater rights than T. G. & Y. to erect the sign; (2) injunction is the proper remedy for a continuing trespass; and (3) the court may not ignore “clear [and] unambiguous language [in the lease] with reference to the sign.”

The argument is interesting.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Forbes/Cohen Florida Properties, L.P.
223 So. 3d 292 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2017)
Weis v. Renbarger
670 P.2d 609 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1981 OK CIV APP 2, 623 P.2d 1064, 1981 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/max-tookah-campbell-co-v-t-g-y-stores-oklacivapp-1981.