Cooper v. Cooper

266 So. 2d 871, 289 Ala. 263, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1057
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 21, 1972
Docket6 Div. 687
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 266 So. 2d 871 (Cooper v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Cooper, 266 So. 2d 871, 289 Ala. 263, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1057 (Ala. 1972).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

Five of six respondents in a suit in equity appeal from an adverse decree rendered on their cross bill. The court ordered dissolution of a partnership and an accounting between the partners.

The record contains more than a thousand pages. We do not undertake to state or set out all the evidence. For the most part, in setting out evidence, we set out evidence which supports the findings .of the register. As to many issues the testimony is in sharp conflict and the evidence would support a finding contrary to that which the register found. The conflicts in evidence presented issues to be decided by the register and his findings are to be upheld unless plainly and palpably wrong.

On October 2, 1963, the complainant filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, in equity, to set aside three deeds by which he and one of his children (respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr.) and their respective wives conveyed three separate parcels of realty to the six respondents. The respondents are all the children of the complainant. The bill of complaint, as amended, proceeds under Title 20, § 15, Code of Alabama 1940, and alleges that the true consideration for the deeds was an agreement by the respondents to support him for life. 1 ■" Each of the deeds was dated *266 February 9, 1960. Two of them (to parcels 1 and 3) were executed by the complainant and his wife, and the third (to parcel 2) was executed by the complainant and the respondent, J. W. Cooper, Jr., and each of their wives.

Respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr. filed an answer and cross bill admitting the allegations of the bill, requested that the court determine the extent of interest in the property that each party held, and prayed that the property be sold for division. The other five respondents, hereinafter called appellants, filed an answer and cross bill denying the alleged support agreement, and averring that the monies used by the complainant in purchasing the property in controversy consisted of the earnings of each of them except Sadie and Clair, and that the conveyances from complainant and J. W. Cooper, Jr. to respondents were executed to fulfill an agreement of trust, or resulting trust. The cross bill alleged further that the complainant and respondents had operated a barbecue stand as a partnership on parcel 3 and prayed for its dissolution and an accounting thereof.

Complainant’s answer to appellants’ cross bill denied that the earnings of anyone other than himself and the respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr. were used in purchasing the said property, and denied the existence of a trust agreement as alleged by the ci'oss bill.

Oral testimony was heard before the Honorable W. A. Jenkins, Jr. who rendered a final decree on July 14, 1964, denying relief to the complainant under the provisions of Title 20, § 15, Code. Pursuant to the prayers of appellants’ cross bill, the decree dissolved the partnership and ordered an accounting to be stated between the pax-tners.

Accordingly, on June 28, 1965, a reference was begun before the register, which lasted for approximately six days. His report,' filed on October 31, 1967, contained essentially the following findings:

1. That complainant and respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr. paid the entire purchase price for parcels 1 and 2, and complainant paid the entire purchase price for parcel 3; and the five appellants paid nothing for them;

2. That the three parcels were not conveyed to the six children (respondents) individually, but were in fact contributed by complainant and respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr. as capital to the partnership, for which the partnex’ship paid no consideration;

3. That the tenns of the partnership were never reduced to writing, and no' agreement was made between the partners as to the disposition of the realty upon dissolution of the partnership; and

4. That an ixndivided one-half interest to parcels 1 and 2 should be returned to respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr., and an undivided one-half interest to parcels 1 and 2, and all of parcel 3, should be returned to complainant.

The five appellants filed exceptions to the register’s report, contending basically that the register misintex’preted the directions given to him by the 1964 decree and, in effect, reversed the decree. These exceptions were overnxled on November 4, 1968, by decree rendered by the Honorable W. C. Barbex, who succeeded Judge Jenkins. The decree ratified and affirmed the findings of the register, divested from the appellants all the right, title, and interest held by them in and to the three parcels of realty, and ox’dered the register to convey the property to the complainant and respondent J. W. Coopex, Jr.

Appellants appeal from the decree of November 4, 1968.

Reduced to its essence, the controversy is this: A decree of the circuit court, in equity, denied complainant’s prayer to set aside certain deeds by which he and respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr. had conveyed property to the six respondents, and dis *267 missed his bill; the same decree determined that the five appellants, whose cross bill alleged the existence of a partnership operating a restaurant on one of the parcels in controversy, were entitled to their prayer for a dissolution of the said partnership and for an accounting thereof. The register’s report of reference, however, found that complainant and respondent J. W. Cooper, Jr. had not made the grants to the six respondents individually but that complainant and J. W. Cooper, Jr. had contributed said property to the partnership (being composed of the complainant and the six respondents), and that complainant and J. W. Cooper, Jr. were entitled to have the property returned to them upon dissolution of the partnership. This finding was confirmed and adopted by a subsequent decree of the circuit court. The appellants’ basic contention, therefore, is that the report of the register, in effect, reversed the original decree of the circuit court by setting aside the deeds in controversy, and that it was error for the November 4, 1968, decree to ratify and confirm the report.

In brief, counsel for appellants argue that the only partnership alleged in the pleadings was the one which “operated” the barbecue stand (which they contend had its inception date in October, 1961, when the restaurant opened for business) and that the register was restricted in his inquiry and consideration to the period during which the partnership existed. Thus, they conclude, it was improper for the register to go behind the alleged inception date and include in the accounting any earlier transactions involving real estate, and that it was equally improper for a subsequent decree of the circuit court to ratify and affirm such action.

The evidence tends to show that about July, 1950, complainant leased and began operating a service station situated on parcel 3, and that at this early date there was already in existence a loose partnership agreement or understanding between and among the complainant and the respondents. The terms and objectives of the partnership were never reduced to writing, and no agreement was made as to the division of partnership profits or assets, except for the general understanding that the family would be provided for from the proceeds of the partnership business.

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Bluebook (online)
266 So. 2d 871, 289 Ala. 263, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-cooper-ala-1972.