Danich v. Culjak

66 P.2d 860, 190 Wash. 79, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 539
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1937
DocketNo. 26412. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 860 (Danich v. Culjak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danich v. Culjak, 66 P.2d 860, 190 Wash. 79, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 539 (Wash. 1937).

Opinion

Beals, J.

During the month of October, 1934, Joe and Maria Bouche, the lessees named in a lease from the state of Washington covering certain land in King county supposed to contain coal, executed a sublease of the land to plaintiff, Vic Danich, and defendants, Dave Culjak, Stanley Simich, and Steve Pukich. During the month of February, 1935, these four sublessees entered into a written partnership agreement providing for the development of the property, each contributing five hundred dollars toward a capital fund with which to conduct mining operations.

*80 The partnership agreement provided that a majority of the partners might require further equal contributions from the partners; that if one partner should advance more than another, the partnership should be indebted to him for the amount advanced; that the management of the partnership should be vested in a majority of the partners voting in accordance with the amounts of their respective investments; that net profits be divided according to the investments of the partners; that proper books of account should be kept, and that on request each partner should render a true account of his dealings with the partnership; that upon the death or retirement of a partner, no allowance should be made for good will; that any partner working for the partnership should receive wages; each partner also agreeing

“. . . that if he withdraws from the partnership before the mining operations to be carried on by the partnership have reached the gangway or main level of the mine to be operated by the partnership, that the remaining partners shall become the absolute owners of any and all interest which the withdrawing partner may have in the business, and such withdrawing partner shall receive no compensation whatsoever for such interest and he shall have no right to otherwise sell or dispose of his interest.”

The agreement did provide, however, that after the mining operations had reached the main gangway or level, any partner could sell his interest.

The following summary is gleaned from plaintiff’s testimony: In addition to the initial contribution of five hundred dollars, plaintiff from time to time paid in other sums (aggregating one thousand dollars prior to October, 1935), and during the summer of 1935, worked on the property forty-four days. Plaintiff resided in Aberdeen; the defendants apparently lived on or near the property, and were actively engaged in *81 the development thereof. Shortly prior to October 22, 1935, defendants requested plaintiff to advance an additional one thousand dollars, whereupon he paid in five hundred dollars, and on or about October 23rd, turned over to defendant Simich an additional three hundred dollars, stating to Simich that he would send the additional two hundred dollars, or would, early in November, go to the mine and perform labor thereon up to that amount. Soon thereafter, plaintiff received a registered letter from defendants’ attorney, dated October 24th, advising him that if he did not pay the five hundred dollars within forty-eight hours, his interest in the partnership would be deemed terminated. Before the receipt of this letter, as above stated, plaintiff had paid three hundred dollars' of the five hundred dollars demanded.

Plaintiff is an Austrian, and can neither read nor write. After some correspondence between defendants’ attorney in Seattle and plaintiff’s attorney in Aberdeen, plaintiff was informed by letter, dated November 8th, that he.had failed to comply with the demands for contribution, and that his rights in the agreement “are hereby terminated.”

Plaintiff thereupon instituted this action, alleging his interest in the partnership property, and that he had contributed $2,300 to the partnership; that the attempted expulsion of plaintiff from the partnership was without right; and that his ownership of an interest in thé partnership should be protected. He prayed for dissolution of the partnership, for a sale of the assets, and for an accounting.

The defendants, by answer and cross-complaint, admitted that plaintiff had contributed $2,300 in cash to the partnership, and performed certain labor for the benefit thereof. They admitted that mining operations on the property had been conducted, and that *82 the interest of plaintiff in the partnership had been forfeited. By way of a cross-complaint, defendants alleged the formation of the partnership for the purpose of developing a coal mine on the property covered by the lease; that the four partners had each contributed five hundred dollars of the initial capital, but that the defendant Pukich had no additional capital; that, at plaintiff’s suggestion, it was agreed that the other three partners should in equal shares advance the assessments against Pukich, and that this arrangement was carried out until plaintiff refused to make further advancements; that under the agreement, plaintiff advanced his share of assessments until October, 1935, when he refused to supply further capital; that thereupon, on or about October 24, 1935, defendants made written demand upon plaintiff that he comply with his agreement and pay in the assessments; that plaintiff refused to comply with this demand; and that, pursuant to the terms of the partnership agreement, defendants terminated plaintiff’s interest in the partnership, and notified plaintiff of this action in writing November 8th;

“That as of the date of the withdrawal by plaintiff and the termination of his interest in said agreement, the parties hereto had made expenditures in cash, in the development of said mine under said agreement,. the sum of $7,851.58;
“That of said sum, the plaintiff had contributed only $2,300, a portion of which, as aforesaid, was the proportionate share of plaintiff in behalf of the defendant Pukich.”

Defendants further alleged that, after the “withdrawal” by plaintiff, the mining operations developed coal of' a merchantable quality, and that defendants, without any contribution from plaintiff, expended an additional sum of over eight thousand dollars. De *83 fendants prayed that plaintiff’s action be dismissed and their title quieted against plaintiff.

The action was tried to the court, sitting without a jury, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence defendants challenged the sufficiency thereof, and moved for a nonsuit, which motion the court granted. From a judgment of dismissal following the granting of this motion, plaintiff has appealed.

Error is assigned upon the granting of respondents’ motion for dismissal; upon the refusal of the court to order an accounting; and upon the refusal of the court to grant appellant any relief.

Of course, at this time, appellant’s testimony, as given on direct and cross-examination, stands unimpeached, and the letters and documents received in evidence speak for themselves. The partnership agreement is long, but the material portions thereof have been hereinabove referred to. The material portion of the vital paragraph has been quoted. By its terms, this portion of the agreement refers only to the “withdrawal” of a partner from the association. It says nothing about the expulsion of a partner,.and apparently does not in express terms contemplate involuntary withdrawal or expulsion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 860, 190 Wash. 79, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danich-v-culjak-wash-1937.