W. T. Grant Co. v. Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc.

423 S.W.2d 251, 1967 Ky. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 5, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 423 S.W.2d 251 (W. T. Grant Co. v. Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. T. Grant Co. v. Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc., 423 S.W.2d 251, 1967 Ky. LEXIS 30 (Ky. 1967).

Opinion

OSBORNE, Judge.

The issues tried by the circuit court in this proceeding arose out of the consolidation of two actions. One, an action by the Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc., v. W. T. Grant Company, which was a petition for a declaration of rights and for an injunction. The other, a proceeding by W. T. Grant Company against Indian Trail Trading Post and the F. W. Woolworth Company, to prohibit them from the construction of a building and for damages. The issues, which are now before us, evolve from these actions and are as follows:

1. Was there a valid and binding lease contract between W. T. Grant Company and the Indian Trail Trading Post?
2. Did Indian Trail Trading Post and F. W. Woolworth Company, in the construction of a building in the Indian Trail Trading Post Shopping Center, violate the terms and conditions of this lease ?

The trial court disposed of these questions by holding that there was a valid lease between the parties and that the Indian Trail Trading Post and the F. W. Woolworth Company did not violate the lease. W. T. Grant Company appealed from that portion of the judgment holding the lease was not violated. Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc., and F. W. Woolworth Company appealed from that portion of the trial court’s judgment which held that there was a valid lease between the parties. The facts surrounding the issues, as we are able to glean them from the record, are as follows: In 1956, Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc., established on Preston Street and Indian Trail, in Louisville, a shopping center. The tract upon which the Center is located is triangular in form and is bisected by a rather large drainage ditch, which at the time was open. As the shopping center is laid out, there is a row of commercial structures across the east side of the lot. These buildings face in a westerly direction and immediately to their front is a considerable blacktopped area reserved for parking. West of the parking area there is located a drainage ditch and several plots designated on the plat as future building sites. The Center was first opened some ten years ago in October of 1957. Prior to *253 the opening, Indian Trail had negotiations with the W. T. Grant Company relative to leasing to it a building located on the commercial row or eastern boundary line of the property. These negotiations commenced in August of 1956 and in September of the same year Indian Trail forwarded to the Grant Company seven copies of a plat of the shopping center. These were examined by the Grant Company and on October 24 of that year Grant forwarded three copies of a lease to Indian Trail for execution. On October 25, 1956, Joseph C. Dahlem, President of Indian Trail executed the three copies of the lease agreement and signed three plat plans and returned these to W. T. Grant Company, who on November 13, 1956, executed the lease and lease agreements which had been returned by Indian Trail. On September 25, 1956, Grant returned duplicate copies to Indian Trail. Indian Trail then, through the action of its Board of Directors, accepted the lease and lease copy and the plot plan which had been returned to it, delivering a copy to the Commonwealth Life Insurance Company which was holder of the first mortgage on the shopping center and recorded a copy with the Jefferson County Court Clerk. W. T. Grant Company occupied the premises in October of 1957, when the shopping center opened and still occupy the premises. Chief controversy in the above transaction, around which Indian Trail now contends there is no valid lease between the parties, is occasioned by the fact that the plat plan which was prepared by Indian Trail and forwarded to the W. T. Grant Company had upon its face these words:

“Dimensions and names subject to change according to tenant requirements.”

When the plat plans had been executed by W. T. Grant and returned to Indian Trail, the quoted legend had been stricken from them. Indian Trail contends that in accepting the lease and lease agreement and in placing them to record it did not notice that this had been crossed out, therefore there was no meeting of the minds. The trial court in its finding of facts and conclusions of law found that the changes were of such significance that Mr. Dahlem, as President of Indian Trail, was bound to have noticed them. The findings are as follows:

“According to the testimony, the lease, with the plot plan attached, and the lease agreement were mailed to Mr. Joseph C. D'hjilem for execution, and at this time the legend had not been altered nor had the approval stamp been placed on the plot plan. Mr. Dahlem, as President of the Indian Trail Trading Post, Inc., executed these documents and in some manner, the transmittal method not being clearly shown, returned them to W. T. Grant Company. At the time they were returned to Grant, the legend had not been altered nor had the approval stamp been placed on the plot plan. Upon receipt of these documents, they were executed by Grant by the authorized signatures being placed on the lease, lease agreement and on the approval stamp which had been placed on the plot plan by a representative of Grant. Thereafter, one complete executed set (duplicate) of the documents, consisting of the lease, with the plot plan attached, and the lease agreement, was received by Mr. Dahlem on or about November 14 or 15, 1956. When so received, these documents were held by him and with him they were present at a meeting of the Board of Directors of Indian Trail on November 26, 1956. Thereafter they were delivered to Mr. Robert P. Hobson and by him or a representative of his office were recorded in the County Clerk’s Office on November 30, 1956. A repetition of the chronology of the events leading up to the execution and recording of the agreements between the parties was to the Court of such significance that it was felt necessary.
“The Court notices that Grant did nothing nor said nothing to mislead Dah-lem, if in fact he was misled, into the *254 acceptance of the lease, lease agreement and plot plan as changed. Indian Trail, by its possession from or about November 15, 1956, to November 30, 1956, without making any objection to any changes or alterations that were made to them. Furthermore, they accepted these documents, recorded them and not until years later did Indian Trail learn of these alterations and express dissatisfaction to Grant. No one contends that these changes or alterations in the instruments could not have been known by Indian Trail when they were received on or about November 14 or 15, 1956. All that was necessary for them to do was to look at them, and if the legend on the plot plan is of the importance as Mr. Dahlem, President of Indian Trail, gives to it, and this Court believes it is of such importance, then certainly he should have right then and there noticed this significant change. Not having done so and not having been lured into any false security or complacency by Grant, plaintiff is not in any position now to challenge the change in the legend (George Pridemore & Son v. Traylor Brothers, Inc., Ky., 311 S.W.2d 396; American Lumber & Mfg. Co. v. Atlantic Mill & Lumber Co., 3 Cir., 290 F. 632; Restatement of the Law of Contracts, 72(2)).

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Bluebook (online)
423 S.W.2d 251, 1967 Ky. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-t-grant-co-v-indian-trail-trading-post-inc-kyctapphigh-1967.