Dini v. Dini

188 Cal. App. 2d 506, 10 Cal. Rptr. 570, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2452
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1961
DocketCiv. 19111
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 Cal. App. 2d 506 (Dini v. Dini) 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
Dini v. Dini, 188 Cal. App. 2d 506, 10 Cal. Rptr. 570, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2452 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

BRAY, P. J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment for $8,500, the purchase price of a partnership interest which the court found defendants had agreed to buy, and that defendants take nothing under their cross-complaint.

Questions Presented

1. Did the agreement of August 28, 1950, obligate Alex to pay $8,500 for Leo’s interest?

2. Alleged error in excluding testimony:

(a) Lina’s deposition.
(b) Testimony offered to prove allegations of cross-complaint.

Record

Plaintiff Lina Dini was the wife of Leonello Dini who died September 26, 1958. Leonello (Leo) was the brother of defendant Alessandro (Alex) Dini. Lina brought this action both as an individual and as executrix of Leo’s estate. In 1946 Alex and Leo formed a partnership which carried on until April 30, 1950, at which time a formal agreement of partnership was entered into between Alex, Leo and Russell Orlandi, Orlandi buying in for $8,500, payable in installments. The articles of copartnership were signed additionally by Leo’s wife Lina, Alex’s wife Alma, and by Orlandi’s mother Flora. A clause in the agreement provided: ". . . upon the death of either copartner, the surviving copartners will, shall and must purchase, and the surviving widow, heirs-at-law or legal representative of the deceased partner will, shall and must sell to the surviving partners, all of the right, title and interest of the deceased partner in and to the partnership business and assets for the sum of $8500.00 ...” August 28, 1950, Orlandi withdrew from the business by a written agreement signed by all the parties to the last mentioned agreement. This agreement provided that the remaining parties “agree that as of close of business August 26th, 1950, the said Russell J. Orlandi has withdrawn from said copartnership, and that said Alexander Dini and Leonello Dini shall and will continue said copartnership under the terms and provisions of the partnership agreement dated April 30, 1950, which they hereby adopt as their articles of copartnership.” (Emphasis added.) Leo and Alex then continued the operation of the business until Leo’s death. Thereafter Alex operated the *509 business. He refused plaintiff’s demand that he purchase Leo's interest for $8,500.

Plaintiff sued for $8,500 damages, claiming that the agreement of August 28 required defendants so to do. Defendants answered, claiming that the agreement to purchase only applied to the three-partner agreement and was not carried over in the later agreement. As additional defenses, defendants claimed (a) that, if it were an agreement to purchase, Leo had not complied with the agreement; (b) that the two partners, subsequent to the August 28 agreement, had entered into an oral partnership upon the same terms as the 1946 agreement and which was later confirmed in writing; (e) estoppel; (d) confidential relationship of the two partners and misrepresentation, concealment and pressure by Leo. Then by cross-complaint, defendants alleged that for good consideration Leo had agreed that upon his death Alex was to receive his interest in the partnership.

The court found in favor of plaintiff on her complaint and against defendants on their answer and cross-complaint.

1. The Agreement of August 28, 1950.

There is no reference in this agreement as to what was to be the situation if one of the two partners died unless the clause to the effect that the Dini brothers would continue as partners “under the terms and provisions of the” April 30 agreement “which they hereby adopt as their articles of co-partnership” caused the clause in the latter agreement, that upon the death of either copartner, the surviving copartners and their respective wives must purchase and pay $8,500 for the interest of the deceased partner, to require the purchase to be made by the survivor of the two. The trial court took the position that there was no ambiguity in the August 28 agreement and refused to admit evidence by defendants offered to explain the intention of the parties and the meaning of the agreement. Reading the agreements of April 30 and August 28 together, it appears that they are unambiguous.

The agreement of April 30 provided that the two Dini brothers were selling Orlandi a one-third interest for $8,500, payable in monthly installments; that the interest of each partner in the business was one-third, except that Orlandi would not have a third interest until he had paid in $8,500. In the event of his demise his share would only equal the amount he had then paid into the copartnership. “The said sum of $8500.00 is the sum which the surviving partners and their respective wives agree to pay, and the surviving widow *510 . . . agrees to accept in full of all interest of the deceased copartner in and to the partnership business and assets. ’ ’

Attorney McRae who drew both agreements testified that in the discussion of the parties concerning the first agreement the brothers evaluated each partnership interest at $8,500 and they considered that to be a fair sum to be paid the surviving widow of a partner if he died. Orlandi, after the execution of the agreement, was dissatisfied and withdrew when he had paid only $773 into the partnership. This amount he was permitted to withdraw when the second agreement was executed. In the discussion with Attorney McRae concerning the drawing of the second agreement nothing was said about what would happen if either of the two remaining partners should die. McRae wanted to draw a completely new agreement but the brothers said that it wasn’t necessary as “they would continue along the partnership agreement they had entered into when Orlandi was buying into the business, and they would adopt all the terms.” Paragraph 3(a) of the agreement stated that the sale price of the one-third interest being sold to Orlandi was $8,500.

Thus we are squarely faced with the question, are the two agreements when read together so clear that as a matter of law it can be said that the parties intended that the $8,500 to be paid for a third interest under the first agreement was to be paid for a half interest under the second agreement? 1 We agree with the trial court; a study of the two agreements shows no ambiguity. It clearly appears that the brothers valued their respective shares at $8,500. With the taking of Orlandi into the partnership their respective interests which had been one-half became one-third but the value of such interests did not change. Orlandi was to pay $8,500 to get a one-third interest. This he did not do. So when he dropped out the brothers’ interests returned to one-half respectively, but each was still considered by them to be of $8,500 value. The obvious intention of the brothers continued to be that upon the death of either partner the widow was to receive $8,500 for his share.

Defendants stress the fact that in the April 30 agreement, which agreement is adopted by the August 28 agreement, the plural word “copartners” is used in designating who shall purchase the interest of a partner who has died, and contend *511 that therefore the purchase clause could not apply when there were only two partners. This contention is not sound.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 Cal. App. 2d 506, 10 Cal. Rptr. 570, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dini-v-dini-calctapp-1961.