Doting v. Trunk

856 P.2d 536, 259 Mont. 343, 50 State Rptr. 826, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 212
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1993
Docket93-124
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 856 P.2d 536 (Doting v. Trunk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doting v. Trunk, 856 P.2d 536, 259 Mont. 343, 50 State Rptr. 826, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 212 (Mo. 1993).

Opinion

JUSTICE WEBER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This case concerns the dissolution of Frank J. Trunk and Son Partnership (the Partnership). On June 16,1988, respondent Marie Doting (Doting) initiated this action by filing a petition to dissolve the Partnership. The District Court subsequently ordered a dissolution of the Partnership and ordered that the winding up be completed within 60 days and that the Partnership be terminated after that time.

We previously addressed this dissolution and termination in Doting v. Trunk (1992), 253 Mont. 350, 833 P.2d 1028 (Doting I)- In that opinion, we affirmed the District Court’s decision which ordered a dissolution of the Partnership further concluding that the Partnership could not be terminated until the winding up of partnership affairs was completed.

On October 30,1992, Doting again petitioned the District Court to terminate the Partnership. The District Court ordered that the Partnership be terminated and instructed that the Partnership’s assets be distributed to the partners. Appellants Frank J. Trunk, Jr. and Patricia A. Trunk (the Trunks) appeal this decision of the District Court which provides for termination of the Partnership.

The sole issue for our review is whether the District Court prematurely terminated the Partnership.

At time of the first appeal, the Partnership still owned assets, including real property, and was responsible for delinquent taxes for a 16-acre parcel of real property situated in Gallatin County. Other partnership matters had also not been settled; in particular, complex partnership tax returns needed to be filed and other administrative duties remained concerning money held in a trust account for the partners.

At the time of the hearing on Doting’s second petition to terminate the Partnership on November 24, 1992, the Partnership owned but three assets. They are as follows:

1. The Bronson contract receivable. On September 30, 1981, the Partnership sold the King Arthur’s Mobile Home Park located in Bozeman, Montana to Clark Bronson for $1,365,000.00. The Partnership receives payments in the amount of $9,321.31 per month on this contract with a balloon payment due on October 1,2001. Mr. Bronson subsequently assigned the contract to King Arthur Partners who in turn sold the mobile home park to Gary and Lorreta Oakland, d/b/a Oakland Holding Company, on March 1,1984. The contract from King *346 Arthur Partners to Oakland was amended on March 25, 1988, and now provides for a final balloon payment on March 1, 1996. It is possible that the balloon payment due on March 1, 1996 on the Oakland contract could effect the Bronson contract, in which case the final balloon payment would likely be paid to the Partnership on March 1, 1996, the same date the Oakland contract comes due. Payments are received by an escrow agent and distributed to the parties.

2. The Kapinos contract receivable. On November 1, 1983, the Partnership sold highway frontage real property to Mr. and Mrs. Kip Kapinos for $150,000.00. The Partnership receives payments of $965.05 per month with a balloon payment due on November 1,1993.

3. The Cook contract receivable. On October 2, 1992, the Partnership sold 4.88 acres to Gene Cook for $75,000.00, with the Partnership carrying $35,000.00 on a contract for deed. The Partnership receives an annual payment of $7,000.00 on this contract, with a balloon payment due on October 2,1997. Payments on the Cook contract are also distributed directly to the partners by an escrow agent.

At the time of the November 24, 1992 hearing, the proceeds from the Bronson contract and the Cook contract were being distributed directly to the partners. The proceeds of the Kapinos contract were being accumulated by Philip Bailey, a Certified Public Accountant who was ordered by the District Court to manage the financial affairs of the Partnership during the winding up process. This money has been kept in a Partnership trust account to pay Partnership debts and expenses incurred during the winding up process. At the time of the hearing the balance in that account was $17,167.00. Mr. Bailey had held these funds in trust because the Partnership had been liable for $27,196.34 in unpaid property taxes on a 16-acre parcel of real property. In October 1992, this parcel was sold by Gallatin County at a public tax auction sale which canceled the property tax debt.

Mr. Bailey testified that after he had completed the 1992 tax returns for the Partnership, any further tax returns would not be complex and coiild easily be handled by others. With the delinquent property taxes effectively eliminated, the Partnership had no further debts. Therefore, the District Court granted Doting’s petition and ordered Mr. Bailey to distribute all but $2000.00 of the accumulated proceeds in the trust account equally between the Trunks and Doting and also ordered that all future payments on the Kapinos contract be distributed equally between the Trunks and Doting. The court further authorized Bailey to draw from the remaining $2000.00 to pay for his *347 services in preparing the 1992 Partnership tax return and then to distribute the remaining proceeds from the trust account. The District Court ordered that the affairs of the Partnership would be decreed wound up and the Partnership terminated on the date of the final distribution to the partners from that trust account.

Did the District Court err by prematurely terminating the Partnership?

The Trunks now argue that Montana law does not allow the District Court to terminate the Partnership and decree that its affairs are wound up until all payments due the Partnership on the three contracts receivable have been received. As stated in the above facts, that date could be as early as October 2,1997 when the Cook contract should be paid in full, or it could continue until October 1, 2001 by the terms of the Bronson contract.

The Trunks contend that § 35-10-602, MCA, and Doting I require that a partnership must continue until all receivables are received. Section 35-10-602, MCA, provides:

On dissolution the partnership is not terminated but continues until the winding up of partnership affairs is completed.

Section 35-10-602, MCA, is taken from the Uniform Partnership Act (UPA) which has been adopted in Montana and nearly all other states. See Annotations, Compiler’s Comments to Title 35, Chapter 10.

We alluded to this statute in our first opinion in this case, stating: Under the UPA, the partnership will continue in existence solely for the purpose of winding up until all receivables have been received and payables have been paid.

Doting I, 833 P.2d at 1033. The Trunks contend that Doting I, interpreting § 35-10-602, MCA, mandates that the Partnership shall continue in existence solely for the purpose of winding up Partnership affairs until all the receivables discussed above have been received.

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Bluebook (online)
856 P.2d 536, 259 Mont. 343, 50 State Rptr. 826, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doting-v-trunk-mont-1993.