Pritsker v. Gateway Woodside, Pb

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 10, 2009
DocketC.A. No. PB 04-6831
StatusPublished

This text of Pritsker v. Gateway Woodside, Pb (Pritsker v. Gateway Woodside, Pb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritsker v. Gateway Woodside, Pb, (R.I. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DECISION
This matter is before the Court for decision following a bench trial. The Plaintiff, Peter D. Pritsker, Inc., d/b/a Providence Diamond Company ("Diamond" or "Plaintiff"), alleges that the Defendant, Gateway Woodside, Inc. ("Gateway"), breached the exclusivity provision contained in the Standard Commercial Lease ("1997 Lease") entered into between Diamond and Gateway by leasing space within the Garden City Shopping Center ("Center") to a store, other than Diamond, whose primary purpose is the retail sale of fine jewelry.1 Further, Diamond claims that because Gateway failed to cure the breach within thirty days of its receipt of written notification of the violation and, to date, has failed to cure the breach, Diamond is entitled to the remedy specified in *Page 2 paragraph 44 of the 1997 Lease.2 In particular, pursuant to paragraph 44 of the 1997 Lease, Diamond seeks reimbursement for fifty percent (50%) of the Fixed Minimum Rent it paid to Gateway from December 20043 through September 30, 2008 — totaling $318,391.80 — plus any additional overpayments that have been made since September 30, 2008 and through the date of the entry of judgment. Diamond also claims that it is entitled to a declaration that, going forward and until Gateway remedies the alleged violation, Diamond's monthly Fixed Minimum Rent payments be reduced by half. Finally, Diamond seeks an award of statutory interest on any overpayments it has made to Gateway and the costs of suit, including reasonable attorneys' fees. In response, Gateway argues that it did not violate the exclusivity provision contained in the 1997 Lease because it did not lease space in the Center to a store — specifically, PWH — whose primary purpose is the retail sale of fine jewelry.

I
Facts and Travel
This dispute revolves around the determination of whether an exclusivity provision contained in a commercial lease has been violated. Against this backdrop, the pertinent facts giving rise to the instant matter are presented herein. Diamond is a family-owned business that operates a high-end fine jewelry store in the Center. In addition to selling jewelry items such as diamonds, necklaces, bracelets, earrings, pins, broaches, etc., Diamond also is an authorized retail dealer of two brands of watches — Rolex and *Page 3 David Yurman. Diamond also sells a number of specialty gift items, such as Swarovski crystal, and certain accessories, such as watch winders.

Diamond occupies the premises designated as 65 Hillside Road, Cranston, Rhode Island pursuant to a document entitled "Standard Commercial Lease" dated January 16, 1997 — i.e., the 1997 Lease — by and between The Flatley Company ("Flatley") and Diamond. (Trial Ex. 1.) Gateway is the current owner of the Center and is the successor in interest to Flatley with respect to the 1997 Lease. PWH4 also operates a store in the Center and occupies its premises pursuant to the PWH Lease.5 (Trial Ex. 2.)

Prior to the 1997 Lease, Diamond had been a tenant in the Center pursuant to an earlier lease. In January of 1997, Diamond agreed to terminate that lease, take over additional space in the Center, commit to a longer lease term, and pay a higher rent per square foot in consideration of exclusive rights granted in the 1997 Lease. The exclusive — which is found in paragraph 44 of the 1997 Lease — provides that Diamond shall be the only store located in the Center whose "primary purpose is the retail sale of fine jewelry." (Trial Ex. 1, ¶ 44.) The 1997 Lease provided for a term of ten years, plus one five-year extension at the tenant's option — which Diamond has since exercised.6 Id. ¶ 2(a).

Regarding the specific terms of the 1997 Lease, paragraph 7(a) defines the permitted use of the premises by Diamond: *Page 4

For the sale and repair at retail of fine jewelry including but not limited to rings, chains, bracelets, watches, necklaces, earrings, precious stones, as well as other jewelry products. TENANT [i.e., Providence Diamond] may also sell china, crystal, flatware, and other fine gift items usually found in jewelry stores, and for no other purpose. Id. ¶ 7(a).

Further, paragraph 44 of the 1997 Lease provides in part, "LANDLORD covenants that following the execution of this Lease and continuing for the term of this Lease, LANDLORD will not lease space within the Center to a store whose primary purpose is the retail sale of finejewelry." Id. ¶ 44 (emphasis added.) Paragraph 44 of the 1997 Lease also contains a "safe harbor" provision for the Landlord providing that, "The incidental sale by a future retailer of fine jewelry items shall not be deemed a violation hereof. As used herein, `incidental sale' shall mean that fine jewelry products do not exceed twenty percent (20%) of the display area within the premises." Id. ¶ 44. The "safe harbor" provision is not a limitation on Diamond's exclusive but, rather, was intended as protection for the Landlord. In particular, the provision was presumably designed to permit the Landlord to lease space in the Center to department stores that maintain a fine jewelry counter or department without violating the exclusive. Finally, paragraph 44 of the 1997 Lease also specifies:

If at any time during the original term or the option to extend of this Lease, a future retailer does operate a fine jewelry store within the Center as determined and qualified at TENANT'S sole expense with LANDLORD'S acceptance thereof, except for the incidental sale by a future retailer of fine jewelry items or any existing tenant with the sale of fine jewelry as an existing permitted use [] within the Center, and LANDLORD does not cure said violation within thirty (30) days of LANDLORD'S receipt of TENANT'S written notification of said violation sent certified or registered mail, then, in addition to any other remedies at law or in equity to which TENANT may be entitled, the Fixed Minimum Rent shall be reduced to fifty *Page 5 percent (50%) of the then in effect Fixed Minimum Rent effective with the first day following the expiration of the thirty (30) day period and continuing until such time as such fine jewelry store except for the incidental sale by a future retailer of fine jewelry items or any existing tenant with the sale of fine jewelry [as] an existing permitted use within the Center continues to operate in violation or occupy a premises in the Center. Id. ¶ 44.

In April of 2004, representatives of Gateway met with representatives of PWH to discuss PWH's interest in relocating its Reservoir Avenue, Cranston store to the Center. PWH's President entered into discussions with General Growth Properties, Inc., the leasing and management agent for Gateway, regarding space possibilities in the Center. Two different locations were available, but a location in the "Commons" area soon became the focus of the dialogue. Subsequently, on August 27, 2004, following months of negotiations, Gateway and PWH signed the PWH Lease, pursuant to which Gateway leased 3497 square feet of space in the Center to PWH. (Trial Ex. 2, § 2.1.)

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Bluebook (online)
Pritsker v. Gateway Woodside, Pb, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritsker-v-gateway-woodside-pb-risuperct-2009.