Copenhaver v. Lister

852 N.E.2d 50, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 1547, 2006 WL 2323216
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 11, 2006
Docket54A04-0512-CV-715
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 852 N.E.2d 50 (Copenhaver v. Lister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copenhaver v. Lister, 852 N.E.2d 50, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 1547, 2006 WL 2323216 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

BAKER, Judge.

This appeal arises from a dispute between Steve Lister and Michael Copen-haver, two well-drillers, whose business relationship dissolved in late 2001. Appellants-defendants Michael and Paula Co-penhaver (collectively, the Copenhavers) appeal the judgment entered in favor of appellee-plaintiff Steve Lister, d/b/a Lister Well Drilling (Lister), regarding his claim against them for replevin of certain business assets and conversion. Specifically, the Copenhavers contend that the trial court's judgment cannot stand because the finding that no partnership existed between the parties was based upon "mutually contradictory" evidence in the record. Appellant's Br. p. 1. Thus, the Copenhay-ers allege that they are entitled to a new trial.

Lister also cross-appeals, claiming that the appeal should be dismissed because the Copenhavers failed to timely file their Notice of Appeal. Concluding that this appeal is properly before us, and finding that the trial court did not err in concluding that no partnership existed between Lister and Copenhaver, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

*52 FACTS

In early 1999, Lister and Gary Norris formed "The Water Boys," a partnership that was involved in the business of well drilling. Towards the end of that year, they executed a written partnership agreement. Lister was also acquainted with another well driller in the area, Dave Hopkins. Hopkins was Copenhaver's uncle who operated his business under the name of "Miracle Well Drilling, Inc."

Sometime around June 2000, Hopkins introduced Copenhaver to both members of The Water Boys partnership, and the four men began to discuss how to work together so that they might expand their Anderson-area business into west-central Indiana, where Copenhaver resided at the time. Although a formal agreement was not reached, Copenhaver began working with the Water Boys, who then assumed the business name of "Lister Well Drilling." The evidence showed that while Co-penhaver's initial work with the Water Boys was to assist Norris on pump-service and well-drilling jobs, his primary responsibility was to rebuild and make operational a 1966-model Franks drilling rig that the Water Boys had recently purchased. As Copenhaver lived in the Crawfordsville area and the Franks rig was located in Anderson, Lister and Norris "paid a lot of his expenses" during that time "[blecause of the distance he was driving" regularly to work on the rig. Tr. p. 25. After the Water Boys disbanded in October 2000, Lister took some equipment, including the drill rig, a truck, and a trailer. Norris also took some of the equipment, including one of the other drill rigs, a water truck, and an air compressor.

Following the breakup, Lister placed approximately $20,000 into the Water Boys' account to pay the company's outstanding expenses. Lister continued paying Copen-haver's expenses, and Copenhaver continued working on the rig that he ultimately completed in early October 2000. Throughout this period, Copenhaver believed that a partnership agreement was in effect when he started working with Lister and Norris.

While working with Lister on an as-needed basis, Copenhaver was paid a fixed amount each week beginning September 14, 2001, and every week thereafter until January 4, 2002. Copenhaver was paid from the Lister Well Drilling account.

In September 2001, Lister advanced a proposal to Copenhaver concerning a possible partnership between the two of them that Copenhaver did not accept. However, at some point, Copenhaver apparently told Lister that the partnership proposal sounded good, but there was never any finalization of any suggested agreement. To be sure, no written agreement was ever prepared or executed, and there was no transfer of titles of vehicles or equipment into a partnership account that involved Copenhaver. Additionally, there was no apparent change in the manner in which the parties conducted their business affairs, and no partnership tax returns were prepared by the Copenhavers or Lister in 2001 or 2002. Copenhaver's individual personal tax return in 2000 did not make any mention of a partnership with either Lister or Norris. Similarly, Paula Copen-haver's individual personal tax return for the tax year 2000 did not mention any partnership between her husband and Lister or Norris.

Copenhaver maintained that had the Water Boys partnership continued to exist, he would have been responsible for operating the Franks rig in his area of the State and would have been able to retain 50% of the profits that the rig generated. Copenhaver also asserted that the remaining 50% of the profits would have been shared equally between Lister and Norris. The *53 evidence also showed that while the Water Boys partnership was still active, their vehicle signage, telephone-directory, advertisements, and flyers listed names and phone numbers for both Lister and Copen-haver. In essence, Copenhaver believed that the alleged profit-sharing agreement between himself and Lister survived the Water Boys split.

Copenhaver also urged that a partnership existed because Lister, on occasion, referred to Copenhaver as his partner or ex-partner-once in the course of making an insurance claim concerning the Franks rig, and again to a State Conservation Officer who investigated a complaint against Lister. Also, two of the checks issued to Copenhaver early in his tenure were notated as a "draw." PLEx. 19.

On the other hand, Lister maintained that there was no discussion of making Copenhaver a partner during the brief negotiations between the Water Boys and Miracle Well Drilling. Lister asserted that Copenhaver worked with the Water Boys in the sole capacity as a subcontractor for whatever work might be available. Lister also insisted that after the Water Boys dissolved, he operated Lister Well Drilling as a sole proprietorship, with Co-penhaver merely making persistent requests to become a partner. Accordingly, Lister believed that the payments he made to Copenhaver from June 2000 to April 2001 were full and final compensation for all of Copenhaver's work during that time, that the payments to Copenhaver from April to September 2001 were directly tied to the amount of work that Copenhaver had personally performed, and that the $900 weekly "draws" to Copenhaver beginning in September 2001 were only on "a trial basis pertaining to going into a partnership" in the future, and not reflective of a partnership having begun at that time. Tr. p. 43.

The record also shows that prior to April 2001, Lister's wife, Melanie, maintained the Lister Well Drilling accounts and financial records, holding the account in her own name because Lister had experienced some legal issues that prohibited him from holding accounts in his name. After the Listers separated in April 2001, Lister brought the books of the business to Copenhaver's wife so that she could resume management of the business finances. After several weeks of using her personal checking account for that purpose, Mrs. Copenhaver opened a separate checking account for the business under her name and Social Security number, with the Copenhavers and Lister authorized to sign on the account.

Sometime during the fall of 2001, Lister became seriously ill and underwent surgery. As a result, he was barely able to work for the remainder of the year. At that time, Copenhaver ran the business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
852 N.E.2d 50, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 1547, 2006 WL 2323216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copenhaver-v-lister-indctapp-2006.