Dillon v. Karr CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 2021
DocketC083853
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dillon v. Karr CA3 (Dillon v. Karr CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Karr CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/19/21 Dillon v. Karr CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (San Joaquin) ----

CECIL W. DILLON et al., C083853

Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Super. Ct. Nos. STK-CV- UBC-2015-0004811, 39-2015- v. 00325635-CU-BC-STK)

WILLIAM G. KARR,

Defendant and Appellant.

Plaintiffs Cecil W. Dillon and Kenneth Kirsten sued their former partner, defendant William G. Karr, for contribution to the repayment of a loan the three of them had entered into while in business together. The trial court ruled for plaintiffs, ordering defendant to pay his one-third share with interest. Defendant challenges that ruling on appeal. He maintains that his obligation to contribute should have been excused because funds from the loan were not used as required and he was never provided an accounting. We affirm the judgment.

1 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY The two plaintiffs and defendant were business partners. In 1993, they formed a Limited Partnership (LP) to develop land in Lodi. And in 2001, they formed Flag City RV Resort, LLC, a Limited Liability Company (LLC) to develop and operate an RV park. In 2006, the three opened a line of credit with the Bank of Agriculture and Commerce to provide working capital for the LLC. When the line of credit became due, the parties renewed it in a series of rollovers. In 2008, the LLC filed for bankruptcy. The next year, the LLC ceased doing business, and the year after that the parties filed a certificate of cancellation. The LP also ceased business in 2010, and a certificate of cancellation was filed in 2011. In 2012, the parties and the bank converted the line of credit to a note, which the parties agreed to pay off. Plaintiffs Kirsten and Dillon ultimately paid the note in full. Defendant paid nothing, though he sent several e-mails confirming his intent to pay his share of the loan once he was able. In 2015, plaintiffs sued defendant, seeking his contribution to the payoff. In response, defendant filed a cross-complaint, asking for an accounting.

Testimony at Trial

At trial, the three former partners testified, along with an accountant who prepared their tax returns. Plaintiff Kirsten testified that he, defendant, and plaintiff Dillon were the general partners of the LP and LLC, and the three of them made the decisions. He also testified that until the instant case, defendant had never requested to inspect or copy any books or records, nor had he requested any kind of accounting. Defendant had access to the business records, with the LLC agreement providing: “Upon reasonable request, each member shall have the right in ordinary business hours to

2 request or copy at the requesting member’s expense the records of the company described.” The agreement also provided: “The books and records shall be at all times maintained at the principal executive office of the company and shall be open to reasonable inspection and examination of the members . . . .” On cross-examination, Kirsten was asked about the plaintiffs’ response to a discovery request for admission, asking: “Admit the loan proceeds from Bank of Agriculture & Commerce, the note for which was executed in July 2011, was distributed, disbursed, and otherwise used for the exclusive benefit of Flag City RV Resort, LLC and its operation.” Plaintiffs had responded, “Subject to objections . . . Denied.” Asked if this meant the money was not distributed, Kirsten testified: “The loan in 2011 was not. It was the one in 2006 that was distributed.” The 2006 line of credit, Kirsten explained, “was set up on a 12-month basis to provide startup working capital for the new Flag City RV Resort.” Kirsten testified that that loan money went to the LLC, though he conceded he did not have records to show that. He also explained that for the original line of credit, the bank wouldn’t lend to the LLC, so the money was lent to the plaintiffs and defendant as individuals, with each jointly responsible for it. Kirsten also testified that in 2012 his computer’s hard drive crashed, and a repair shop was unable to recover the data. Plaintiff Dillon testified that as to the LP, profits and losses were divided three ways between plaintiffs and defendant, and from day one, interest on the line of credit was paid equally between them. Dillon testified that the line of credit was converted to a promissory note in 2012, when the bank wanted the credit line repaid. Unable to pay the $180,000 owed, plaintiffs and defendant negotiated a plan with the bank to make balloon payments for three years, until the loan was paid off. All three signed the documents. When the first payment was due, Kirsten and Dillon contacted defendant for his share. Defendant said he was broke and couldn’t put any money in. He, however, wrote

3 Kirsten and Dillon an e-mail, dated February 21, 2012: “This email is my confirmation that it is my full intention to pay my one-third share of the [Bank of Agriculture and Commerce] credit line principal balance and interest at [the bank’s] prevailing interest rate.” Dillon testified that prior to the lawsuit, defendant had never requested an accounting. He also testified that he told defendant that Kirsten’s hard drive had crashed. On cross-examination, Dillon was asked: “the initial loan, the initial money that was borrowed by the three of you, how do you know that that money went into the LLC?” Dillon testified: “I have no idea. I’m the engineer. I wasn’t doing the finances. You’re asking me where a check or two or funds went ten years ago. That wasn’t my role in this partnership.” The accountant who prepared tax returns for plaintiffs and defendant, was asked if defendant had requested an accounting of the LLC or LP. He testified: “Nothing that would have been out of the usual. He may have requested and received one over the years. We worked on projections together and other things related to the entities, but, you know, just normal what he would have been entitled to as a general partner or a manager.” Asked, “if defendant had presented you with a formal request for an accounting, would you have provided one?,” the accountant testified: “Well, he was entitled to one. He’s a general partner and a manager just like the other two.” He added: “I always thought the relationship was pretty open between the parties and if at any time any of the managers or general partners would ask for a copy of the tax return, I would have provided it. They’re all entitled to it.” The accountant also testified that he never prevented defendant from inspecting the books or records, and he was not aware of any fraud by the parties. At trial, defendant was asked if he considered himself “financially sophisticated.” He answered, “I certainly understand the financial . . . side of the game, yes,” adding that

4 he had been “extensively involved in the banking industry, and . . . was in various ventures with different companies in different capacities.” He had also been chief executive officer of First Commercial Bank for around 10 years. And he had reviewed, overseen, or drafted more than a hundred funding agreements. Defendant testified that he was never denied access to the books and records by the accountant. He had seen the LLC’s tax returns from 2007 to 2009, the LLC’s check registers and QuickBooks reports from 2001 through 2006, and the LLC’s balance sheet for 2009. And to the best of his knowledge, he had never requested an accounting before he filed his cross-complaint.

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Dillon v. Karr CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-karr-ca3-calctapp-2021.