Cooper v. Fulton

158 So. 2d 759
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 4, 1963
Docket62-769, 63-5
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 158 So. 2d 759 (Cooper v. Fulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Fulton, 158 So. 2d 759 (Fla. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

158 So.2d 759 (1963)

R.K. COOPER, Individually, and R.K. Cooper, Inc., a Florida corporation, Appellants,
v.
Alan D. FULTON, Appellee.

Nos. 62-769, 63-5.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Third District.

October 22, 1963.
On Rehearing December 4, 1963.

Blackwell, Walker & Gray and Melvin T. Boyd, Miami, for appellants.

Welsh, Cornell, Pyszka & Carlton, Sam Daniels, Miami, for appellee.

Before HORTON, TILLMAN PEARSON, and HENDRY, JJ.

*760 PEARSON, TILLMAN, Judge.

R.K. Cooper and R.K. Cooper, Inc. were defendants in a chancery action brought by Alan D. Fulton. During the progress of this litigation, we have been presented with interlocutory appeals on three previous occasions.[1] The cause was concluded in the circuit court by a final decree which found the equities with the plaintiff. Thereafter, pursuant to a reservation in the final decree stating that the attorney's fee would be included as costs, the court entered an order doing so. The defendants have filed both an appeal from the final decree and a "Notice of Interlocutory Appeal or Petition for Review of Cost Judgment". The assessment of the legal fee was made an assignment of error in the appeal from the final decree. This court has consolidated the petition and the appeal and this opinion disposes of both.

Plaintiff Fulton's complaint alleged an oral partnership agreement with both the individual and the corporate defendant. It was alleged that the purpose of this partnership was to operate an insurance agency from which plaintiff was to receive 50% of the net proceeds. After extended litigation, the chancellor entered an interlocutory decree adjudicating:

"* * * that a partnership relation existed in this case between the plaintiff (Alan D. Fulton) and the defendants (R.K. Cooper, individually, and R.K. Cooper, Inc.), which partnership commenced on or about July 1, 1952, and terminated on or about October 6, 1958, when the plaintiff was excluded from the business. The partnership between Alan D. Fulton and R.K. Cooper consisted of an insurance agency which was operated by and through the defendant, R.K. Cooper, Inc."

This interlocutory decree was affirmed by this Court. Cooper v. Fulton, Fla.App. 1961, 132 So.2d 616. Thereafter, the cause was referred to a special master who heard the evidence presented and recommended a decree for the plaintiff. The first recommendation of the special master as to the amount to be awarded the plaintiff was as follows:

"I recommend that judgment be entered in favor of the plaintiff, ALAN D. FULTON, and against the defendants, jointly and severally, for the sum of $44,024.18, for appropriating plaintiff's one-half interest of the good will, going concern value and assets of the partnership insurance agency on October 6, 1958, together with interest at the rate of 6% per annum from October 6, 1958 until the date of entry of the final decree. The defendants' Counterclaim should be dismissed."

Plaintiff and defendants filed exceptions to the special master's report. The special master then filed an amended report. No authority for the making of an amended report appears in the record, but no one objected and the parties filed exceptions to it. Since no objection was made to this unusual procedure, it must be presumed that a basis exists for the filing of the amended report in some portion of the record not included in the record on appeal. The amended final report made the following recommendation as to the amount to be awarded the plaintiff:

"I recommend that judgment be entered in favor of the plaintiff, ALAN D. FULTON, and against the defendants, jointly and severally, in the sum of $90,000.00, less the percentage of interest found to be taken by FULTON which made up the proportion of the gross annual commissions, less $728.08 from the Savage and Cole deals admitted by FULTON, less $420.57 for the loss that existed for the six days in October of 1958, totaling $1,148.65. FULTON is entitled to receive a deduction from said amount, being the *761 difference between the net sum earned and the amount received by FULTON, which would total $876.31. After adjusting all of the above figures, it appears the COOPER interests would be entitled to reimbursement of $272.24. This sum should be deducted from the amount awarded, less $9,703.68 for funds borrowed by FULTON from the company."

The appellants have presented ten points on appeal and have extensively argued each of them. We have determined that it is necessary to discuss points 2, 8 and 9.

By point 2 the appellants present the question: "Whether the chancellor erred in refusing to follow the law of the case which holds that the plaintiff is entitled to an accounting of 50% of the net profits of the insurance department of R.K. Cooper, Inc. and instead awarding to plaintiff an amount purportedly equal to 50% of the `assets of the partnership?'" The gist of this point is a contention that our opinion reported at 132 So.2d 616 established as the law of this case that the plaintiff was entitled to 50% of the net profits of the insurance department of the appellant, R.K. Cooper, Inc.; and, therefore, the plaintiff could not be entitled to a percentage of the net worth of the partnership as a going business. The latter basis was used by the special master and the chancellor in computing the amount due the plaintiff.

It is true that our opinion on the interlocutory appeal above cited does use the term "50% of the net profits." However, we must now point out that the use of this term was not necessary to a decision upon any of the issues presented by that appeal. Our holding did no more than affirm the interlocutory decree finding that there was a partnership and requiring an accounting. The issues thereafter to be tried depended upon the pleadings. The complaint claimed "50% of the net proceeds of the partnership." We must, therefore, now hold that the use of the term "net profits" in our opinion reported at 132 So.2d 616 did not establish the law of the case so as to preclude a judgment for 50% of the "net proceeds of the partnership." Cf., Graham v. Street, 2 Utah 2d 144, 270 P.2d 456 (1954).

In his first report, the special master used a base figure of $180,000 to compute the value of the partnership. He then reduced this sum by 40% or $72,000 — the percentage of business "probably" controlled by Fulton after the dissolution of the partnership — and divided the remainder ($108,000) in half to arrive at each partner's interest ($54,000).

In his amended report, he again found the value of the partnership to be $180,000.00, and recommended that Fulton be awarded the sum of $90,000, less the percentage of partnership business to be determined to have been taken by Fulton. Pursuant thereto, he stated the following:

"In connection with the finding that FULTON serviced accounts which composed 40% of the gross commission earnings of the agency, this Amended Special Master's Report recedes from said finding, in that said finding was made from a memorandum presented by the plaintiff's attorney. In re-examining all of the testimony presented before me, I find no specific testimony which would confirm said finding that FULTON actually serviced and took with him 40% of the gross commission earnings of the agency.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 2d 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-fulton-fladistctapp-1963.