Parker v. Levin

Decision Date04 January 1934
PartiesPARKER v. LEVIN.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Exceptions from Superior Court, Suffolk County; Weed, Judge.

Action of contract by Rose Parker against Jacob S. Levin with trustee process, tried without a jury. Judgment in favor of plaintiff, for $1,120 and defendants bring exceptions.

Exceptions overruled.H. Mandelstam and S. Eisenstadt, both of Boston, for plaintiff.

S. Sigilman, of Boston, for defendant.

LUMMUS, Justice.

On August 25, 1931, the defendant leased to the plaintiff, for five years beginning September 1, 1931, a store at 1147 Broadway in Somerville, ‘to be used for the purpose of operating a delicatessen store such as in now conducted [by the plaintiff] on the premises,’ and covenanted ‘that no other delicatessen store shall be located on the premises; viz. 1119-1147 Broadway, Somerville.’ On April 26, 1932, the plaintiff brought this action for breach of the covenant. The fact was, that the defendant, on October 23, 1931, leased for five years to the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company a store on the premises referred to in the covenant, at 1141 and 1143 Broadway, ‘for the purpose of a general merchandise business, including fresh meats, fish, fruits, vegetables, delicatessen, pastry items.’ The judge, sitting without a jury, found that the word ‘delicatessen,’ which was common to the purposes expressed in the two leases, includes cooked meats, prepared salads, and cheese, all of which were sold by the plaintiff and the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company in competition with each other. The two stores were separated only by an entrance to the upper floors of the same building. On these facts the judge rightly ruled that the covenant was broken, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. A delicatessen store, within the meaning of the covenant, is one that sells delicatessen, and not merely one that sells nothing else. Fitz v. Iles, [1893] 1 Ch. 77; Waldorf-Astoria Segar Co. v. Salomon, 109 App. Div. 65, 95 N. Y. S. 1053, affirmed 184 N. Y. 584, 77 N. E. 1197. We cannot follow Mook v. Weaver Brothers, Inc., 61 App. D. C. 214, 59 F.(2d) 1028, so far as it may tend to the contrary. The plaintiff testified that she vacated the leased premises on April 18, 1932, because of the competition of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, but no such question of eviction is involved as the defendant contends. The present action is based on the express covenant against competition. If the covenant could have been enforced specifically against the competing company (Strates v. Keniry, 231 Mass. 426, 121 N. E. 151;Sheff v. Candy Box, Inc., 274 Mass. 402, 174 N. E. 466), the existence of that remedy did not exclude an action on the covenant. Neal v. Jefferson, 212 Mass. 517, 521, 522, 99 N. E. 334, 41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 387, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 205.

The plaintiff sold other goods besides delicatessen, principally bread, milk, cake, candies and groceries. Her books did not distinguish with any exactness sales or purchases of delicatessen from other sales or purchases. She testified that only ten per cent. of her business was other than delicatessen, but that apparently is an under estimate. She testified that in November, 1931, the competition compelled her to change her prices. Her volume of gross sales from the spring of 1931 until the spring of 1932 averaged a little more than $1,500 a month, and there was no material decline in her volume of business. Taking the monthly purchases of goods and operating expenses, and deducting them from the gross sales for the month, There was less difference or ‘profit’ in the later months than in the earlier ones; but as no inventory appears to have been taken the figures have little significance. When the plaintiff took her lease there was no other delicatessen store in Teele Square, where the premises were situated, and no other delicatessen store nearer than a store owned by her in Davis Square. The judge awarded the plaintiff damages of $1,120, with interest from the date of the writ.

The defendant contends that the damages must be measured by the loss of profits in purely delicatessen business during the plaintiff's occupancy, due to competition in violation of the covenant. But strictly speaking the measure of damages is rather the difference in value between the plaintiff's leasehold with the covenant against competition unbroken, and the same leasehold with a store next door selling delicatessen as of right. Evidence of loss of profits was admissible only so far as it bore upon such difference in value. See Neal v. Jefferson, 212 Mass. 517, 99 N. E. 334, 41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 387, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 205; Nelson Theatre Co. v. Nelson, 216 Mass. 30, 34, 35, 102 N. E. 926;Grennan v. Murray-Miller Co., 244 Mass. 336, 339, 138 N. E. 591;Brackett v. Commonwealth, 223 Mass. 119, 126, 111 N. E. 1036, Ann. Cas. 1918B, 863;Mann v. Scituate, 260 Mass. 592, 157 N. E. 656;Montgomery County Union Agricultural Society v. Harwood, 126 Ind. 440, 26 N. E. 182,10 L. R. A. 532;George M. Keebler, Inc., v. Land Title & Trust Co. 266 Pa. 440, 109 A. 659;Supreme Finance Corporation v. Burnee Corp., 146 Misc. 374, 262 N. Y. S. 147. Compare Kostopolos v. Pezzetti, 207 Mass. 277, 93 N. E. 571, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 859;Powers v. Rittenberg, 270 Mass. 221, 224, 169 N. E....

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