W & G Seaford Associates, L.P. v. Eastern Shore Markets, Inc.

714 F. Supp. 1336, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6483, 1989 WL 60729
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJune 9, 1989
DocketCiv. A. 88-232-CMW
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 714 F. Supp. 1336 (W & G Seaford Associates, L.P. v. Eastern Shore Markets, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W & G Seaford Associates, L.P. v. Eastern Shore Markets, Inc., 714 F. Supp. 1336, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6483, 1989 WL 60729 (D. Del. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

CALEB M. WRIGHT, Senior District Judge.

This is a contract action in which plaintiff, W & G Seaford Associates, L.P. (“W & G”), seeks to enforce a liquidated damages clause in a commercial lease entered into with defendant, Eastern Shore Markets, Inc. (“ESMI”). W & G, a Delaware limited partnership, is the owner of Seaford Village Shopping Center (“Seaford Village”), a strip shopping center in Seaford, Delaware. ESMI, a Virginia corporation, signed a lease under which it was to occupy a large retail area in Seaford Village. Before occupying the space, ESMI cancelled its plans to operate a food market in Sea-ford Village and repudiated the lease.

W & G filed suit on May 5, 1988. ESMI answered and counterclaimed for the rent deposit it had tendered to W & G under the lease. Presently before the Court are four motions. On January 17, 1989, ESMI filed a motion for summary judgment. It argues, in sum, that no contract ever existed because of the non-occurrence of certain conditions precedent, and that, if a contract did exist, the liquidated damages provision in the lease is void as a penalty.

Three days later, W & G filed a motion for partial summary judgment in which it seeks to strike ESMI’s defense that the liquidated damages clause is not valid or enforceable. 1 In response to W & G’s motion, ESMI moved to strike an affidavit submitted by W & G in support of W & G’s motion. Also in connection with the disputed affidavit, ESMI filed a motion for relief under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f).

This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332. This Opinion will constitute the Court’s consolidated decision on all four pending motions. For the reasons stated herein, the Court will grant W & G’s motion for partial summary judgment and deny ESMI’s motion for summary judgment. Also, the Court will grant ESMI’s request to strike the disputed affidavit, but will deny ESMI’s request for relief under Rule 56(f).

1. FACTS 2

Seaford Village is a strip shopping center having a total retail area of 185,000 square feet. There are three areas designated for larger retailers: (1) Legget, a department store, occupies 30,627 square feet; (2) Roses, also a department store, occupies 45,- *1338 495 square feet; and (3) Safeway Stores, Inc. (“Safeway”) leased an area of 40,998 square feet located in the center of Seaford Village for use as a supermarket.

Safeway entered into its lease agreement with W & G to occupy the 40,998-square-foot area (“Safeway store”) on July 31, 1984. The lease term was twenty years, beginning September 1, 1985, and running through August 31, 2005. The parties agreed to a rent of $6.50 per square foot and a percentage rent, beginning in the eleventh year of the original term, of one-half of one percent (0.50%) of gross sales in excess of $14 million.

Safeway ceased operations in the Sea-ford store on February 22,1987, but continued paying W & G square-footage rent. Effective October 1, 1988, Safeway will no longer be paying any rent to W & G, pursuant to an Agreement for Termination and Release of Lease executed between W & G and Safeway. Under this agreement, the parties mutually agreed to terminate the lease and liquidate Safeway’s unfulfilled obligations by the lump-sum payment by Safeway to W & G of $450,000.

In July of 1987, W & G, through Richard Sullivan, then vice-president of the eastern region of Brown Properties, Inc. and property manager of Seaford Village, contacted ESMI about the possibility of leasing the vacant Safeway premises at Seaford Village. On August 5, 1987, David Green of B. Green & Co., a prospective tenant for the vacant Safeway store, informed Sullivan that B. Green & Co. decided against leasing the Safeway store because the Sea-ford market was not as strong as other nearby markets such as Dover, and the location would produce only marginal sales in view of the proposed Food Lion supermarket to be built across the highway from Seaford Village.

Negotiations between ESMI and W & G regarding the possibility of ESMI’s leasing the vacant Safeway store commenced in August of 1987. On September 23, 1987, Joseph P. Ritorto, president of W & G, participated in a conference call with Edward L. Beyer and Lawrence J. Longua of Bankers Trust Company, W & G’s bank, regarding the vacant Safeway store. The bank officers instructed Ritorto that in no event should he lose ESMI as a prospective tenant for the Safeway space. They emphasized to Ritorto the importance of placing a food store at Seaford Village, given the turndowns from other potential tenants in the market and the lack of depth of the food retail market in Seaford, especially in light of the announced opening of a Food Lion supermarket across the street from Seaford Village.

Negotiations between Ritorto, on behalf of W & G, and Nick Styke, president of ESMI, continued through the fall of 1987. On December 3, 1987, Styke signed a ten-year lease with W & G for the Safeway space. By cover letter on the same date, Styke instructed that the lease was not to be “effective” until ESMI received the following: (1) an agreement from Safeway that the other Safeway store in Seaford, Safeway Store # 1405, would not be leased to a competing supermarket for a period of five years; (2) approval in writing from Safeway or the landlord that all existing equipment that was inventoried would remain on the property for an agreed cash price of $500,000; and (3) legal bill of sale for the equipment purchased. Styke also stated in the letter that “[w]e have signed the proposed lease and are returning two copies for signatures by the landlord.”

By its own terms, the lease was made expressly contingent on the unconditional termination of the existing Safeway lease in a manner acceptable to W & G. 3 As to the no-compete agreement referenced in Styke’s letter, Safeway signed a no-compete agreement. A copy of the agreement was hand-delivered to Martin Atkins, vice president of ESMI, prior to the closing scheduled for January 5, 1988, between W & G and ESMI. Copies of the no-compete agreement, the agreement by Safeway to sell ESMI its existing equipment and the accompanying bill of sale were apparently *1339 available at the first scheduled closing. 4 That closing was postponed at ESMI’s request.

A lease amendment, dated January 15, 1988, was executed on February 3, 1988. The amendment gave ESMI’s bank, Mercantile Safe Deposit and Trust Company (“Mercantile”), a first-lien position on the Safeway equipment to be purchased by ESMI. In addition, the amendment reduced the square-footage rent and changed the percentage-rent figures.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
714 F. Supp. 1336, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6483, 1989 WL 60729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-g-seaford-associates-lp-v-eastern-shore-markets-inc-ded-1989.