Downs v. Downs

410 So. 2d 793
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1982
Docket8582
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 410 So. 2d 793 (Downs v. Downs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downs v. Downs, 410 So. 2d 793 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

410 So.2d 793 (1982)

Mattie Rose Ferguson DOWNS, Plaintiff and Defendant-Appellant,
v.
Malcolm C. DOWNS, Defendant and Plaintiff-Appellee.

No. 8582.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

February 3, 1982.
Rehearings Denied March 23, 1982.

*795 Davis & Saybe, Michael H. Davis, Alexandria, for plaintiff and defendant-appellant.

Kennedy & Yeager, Ralph W. Kennedy, Alexandria, for defendant and plaintiff-appellee.

Before CULPEPPER, FORET and CUTRER, JJ.

FORET, Judge.

Malcolm C. Downs (plaintiff) brought this action to partition certain property alleged to have fallen into the former community of acquets and gains that had existed between him and the defendant, Mattie Rose Ferguson Downs. The trial court appointed W. T. Armitage, a notary public of Rapides Parish, to make an inventory of the property. Armitage made the inventory as ordered and filed his proces verbal with the court. Both parties filed numerous motions to traverse the proces verbal.

Trial of plaintiff's action, and the motions to traverse, resulted in a judgment by the trial court decreeing a number of items of movable property to be defendant's separate property. The trial court further decreed that a number of items of immovable property were community property and ordered that these immovables, together with certain movable property, be partitioned by licitation with the sale to be conducted at public auction by the Sheriff of Rapides Parish. Finally, judgment was rendered in favor of defendant granting her a credit of $2,217.60, and in favor of plaintiff granting him a credit of $18,737.58 against the former community. The judgment is final as to plaintiff as he has failed to perfect an appeal.

Defendant was granted this suspensive appeal from the trial court's judgment and raises the following issues:

(1) Whether the capital account of plaintiff in the Downs Furniture Company is a community asset;

(2) Whether plaintiff's partnership interest in Downs Furniture Company is community property;

(3) Whether the increase in value of plaintiff's partnership interest in the Downs Furniture Company resulted from the reinvestment of community funds into the business and/or community labor performed for the business;

(4) Whether the community is indebted to defendant because of defendant's alleged use of her separate funds to improve community property or for other community purposes;

(5) Whether plaintiff's partnership interest in Downs Investment Company is community property.

FACTS

Plaintiff and defendant were married on December 25, 1953, and established their domicile in Rapides Parish. Defendant obtained a judgment of separation on December 14, 1977, and the parties were subsequently divorced on November 28, 1979.

Plaintiff instituted this action on May 11, 1978, reciting the above mentioned facts, and alleging that he and defendant were owners in common of certain property that had fallen into the community of acquets and gains which no longer existed between them. Plaintiff further alleged that the parties were unable to agree upon a non-judicial partition of the property and that he was entitled to a judicial partition thereof.

Defendant answered plaintiff's original petition, alleging that the household goods, enumerated in the detailed descriptive list attached to the petition, were, for the most part, defendant's separate property. Defendant also alleged that the detailed descriptive list failed to include certain items of community property, and that she was entitled to reimbursement from the community for her separate funds alleged to have been expended to improve community property or for other community purposes.

NATURE OF PLAINTIFF'S CAPITAL ACCOUNT

Defendant contends that plaintiff's capital account maintained for him by the *796 Downs Furniture Company is community property because it consists solely of plaintiff's share of the partnership's profits placed therein. She argues that plaintiff's share of the partnership's profits became community property when they were placed in the account.

William Roberts, a C.P.A. and an attorney, was accepted by the court as an expert in accounting. He testified that he had provided his services as a C.P.A. to the Downs Furniture Company since its inception. He explained the nature of plaintiff's capital account as follows:

"... that's composed of cash, accounts receivable, inventory, furniture and fixtures, vehicles, cash surrender value of life insurance, meter deposits ... total less accounts payable, taxes payable, trade notes payable, notes payable ... net capital."

Roberts explained that a separate capital account was maintained for each partner. That partner's share of the profits generated by the partnership would be credited to his capital account each year (losses were deducted therefrom). A partner was allowed to withdraw funds from the partnership as long as funds were available and the withdrawals did not exceed the amount stated in his capital account. The withdrawal would be accomplished by writing a check on the partnership checking account made out to the partner making the withdrawal and by decreasing the amount stated in his capital account accordingly. Roberts further explained that these capital accounts were not actual cash accounts, but were simply maintained as a method of indicating the amount that each partner had invested in the business.

The evidence shows that a partner's capital account is nothing more than a reflection of the net capital invested by that partner in the business, together with his share of the partnership's profits reinvested by him. The accounts are not separate and distinct entities that can be characterized as "property". They exist only on paper as a means of showing the value of each partner's interest in the partnership. We find no merit in defendant's contention that plaintiff's capital account is community property.

NATURE OF PLAINTIFF'S PARTNERSHIP INTEREST IN DOWNS FURNITURE CO.

Defendant concedes that plaintiff's partnership interest in the Downs Furniture Company was originally his separate property, having been acquired before the parties were married. However, she contends that the nature of that interest was changed by certain events such that it is now community property.

Her position is that plaintiff formed new partnerships, with his brothers, in 1968 and 1972 and that plaintiff used community property to finance his interest in these new partnerships. However, the trial court found that the events consisted of nothing more than a transformation of plaintiff's interest in one partnership to an identical interest in another partnership. The trial court, in support of its findings, cited the jurisprudence holding that the mere change of separate property from one form to another during the existence of the community does not change the nature of that property from separate to community[1].

The written agreement signed by the partners in 1968 indicates that they were merely setting forth in writing the terms of a verbal contract of partnership entered into by them on April 1, 1964. The same is true with respect to the written agreement executed in 1972, although that agreement changed the percentage share of each partner in the profits and losses of the partnership. Thus, the crucial question is what was the nature of the property (either community or separate) used by plaintiff to finance his interest in the partnership formed on April 1, 1964.

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Related

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669 So. 2d 622 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1996)
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Bluebook (online)
410 So. 2d 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downs-v-downs-lactapp-1982.