Coleman v. Lofgren

633 P.2d 1365, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 544
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1981
DocketNo. 5124
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 1365 (Coleman v. Lofgren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Lofgren, 633 P.2d 1365, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 544 (Ala. 1981).

Opinions

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

I.

This marks the second occasion this matter is before us. In Coleman v. Lofgren, [1366]*1366593 P.2d 632 (Alaska 1979), we held that Coleman, as successor of a dissolved partnership that included Lofgren, Wright and Coleman, had assumed the debts incurred by the former partnership.1 More particularly, we concluded that these debts became the obligation of a successor partnership between Coleman and his two sons.

In our opinion in the first appeal we determined that one facet of the superior court’s decision necessitated a remand for additional proceedings. Our reasons for the remand were explained as follows:

The trial court found that a note signed by the withdrawing partners on February 1, 1973, in favor of the First National Bank of Fairbanks in the sum of $30,020 was a partnership obligation for which the successor partners, the Colemans, were primarily liable under their agreement to assume the liabilities of the partnership. However, the partnership records show that on February 1, 1973, Wright and Lofgren were each credited with a capital contribution of $15,000, and the records do not indicate any assets attributable to such a contribution other than the funds received from the First National Bank under the note of the same date. Thus, the indications are very strong that the note proceeds were used to supply the capital contributions of Lof-gren and Wright. If this is so, the primary obligation to repay the note should fall on Lofgren and Wright, not on the partnership or on the successor partners.
Because this issue was not sharply focused in the trial proceedings, we shall remand to the trial court so that Lofgren and Wright may be given the opportunity to show, if they can, an independent source for their capital contribution of February 1, 1973. If they fail, the judgment must be modified accordingly.2

On remand, the superior court heard extensive testimony, at the conclusion of which it ruled that Lofgren’s and Wright’s capital contributions did have an independent source. In resolving the issue, the superior court made two related findings. First, it found that:

Lofgren and Wright have demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that Wallace Coleman was informed of the partnership loan with the [FNB] and that all parties in this action considered this debt to be a partnership obligation which was to be satisfied by the partnership assets which had been escrowed to secure performance of the sublease agreement with J. B. Gottstein and Company. Although the partnership records reflected a contribution of $15,000.00 each from Lofgren and Wright on February 1, 1973, this was merely a bookkeeping error which did not accurately reflect the agreement or understanding of any of the partners involved in this action. Through exhaustive testimony and documentary evidence, defendants Lofgren and Wright have demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that the note proceeds were not used or intended by them or the [Colemans] to be capital contributions of Lofgren and Wright. Accordingly, this court finds that the primary obligation to repay the note lies with the assuming partners ....

In our view, this finding is not clearly erroneous.3 Mrs. Lofgren, who was the bookkeeper for the partnership, testified that she had decided to make the entry in the capital accounts because it was a convenient place to put a crediting entry and keep the books in balance. She also testi[1367]*1367fied that she discovered the error in April or May of 1974 and attempted to correct it, but was unsuccessful because the partnership records were by then in the possession of the new Coleman partnership.

Wright and Lofgren both testified that they had never contemplated that the proceeds from the FNB loan would be part of their capital investment in the partnership. They both indicated they considered the loan to be a partnership obligation, and that the loan and the escrow account securing the sublease agreement with J. B. Gottstein were to be a wash transaction. The partnership would pay interest on the note, and when the agreement with J. B. Gottstein ended, or this escrow account was replaced by a new security arrangement, the proceeds of the escrow account would be used to pay off the note, and the interest which had accumulated would be paid to the partners or the partnership.4

Wright and Lofgren also testified that prior to his entry into the partnership Coleman had been fully informed of the existence of the FNB note and its relationship to the escrow account securing the sublease agreement. Both indicated that Coleman had refused to replace John Bridgers, to whose place he succeeded in the partnership, on the note.5

The only conflicting evidence was Coleman’s testimony that he did not recall the escrow account or the note ever being mentioned, but the superior court specifically stated that it had resolved conflicting issues in favor of the Wright-Lofgren witnesses.

The superior court further concluded that an independent source for the $30,000 in Lofgren’s and Wright’s capital accounts did exist. It found that “the capital contributions of Lofgren and Wright at the time of Coleman’s entry into the partnership were to consist of cash which was actually invested in the business, and past and future credit which Lofgren and Wright were to receive for the duties which they performed in the operation of the warehouse.” Additionally, the superior court determined “that the reasonable value of the services and labor so rendered by Lofgren and Wright during their association with the warehouse [was] at least $15,000.00 each.” 6

[1368]*1368Coleman acknowledged that when the partnership was first formed it was agreed that he would be a “silent partner” while Lofgren and Wright would continue to work in the business, and that they had agreed not to take any draws until the business showed a profit. He acknowledged that they would share in the business on an equal basis, but he also maintained he expected that for an equal interest in the partnership all partners should put in the same amount of money. Lofgren denied that he or Wright had ever represented that they had $30,000 to put into the business. Here, again, the superior court resolved conflicting credibility issues in favor of the Wright-Lofgren witnesses.7

Given the foregoing, we conclude that the superior court’s finding that an independent source was proven for the $30,-000 in Lofgren’s and Wright’s capital accounts was not clearly erroneous. Although our remand in regard to the first appeal in the case at bar was worded to require that Lofgren and Wright demonstrate an independent source for their capital contributions, the primary question was who should bear the responsibility for repayment of the $30,000 FNB loan. In this regard we hold that the superior court’s determinative findings of fact as to an independent source for Lofgren’s and Wright’s

capital contributions furnish the requisite foundation for the further conclusion that the $30,000 loan was intended by the Coleman, Lofgren and Wright to be a partnership obligation, and is therefore the responsibility of the Colemans.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
633 P.2d 1365, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-lofgren-alaska-1981.