Estate of Witlin

83 Cal. App. 3d 167, 147 Cal. Rptr. 723
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 26, 1978
Docket51881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 Cal. App. 3d 167 (Estate of Witlin) 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
Estate of Witlin, 83 Cal. App. 3d 167, 147 Cal. Rptr. 723 (Cal. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

83 Cal.App.3d 167 (1978)
147 Cal. Rptr. 723

Estate of BERNARD J. WITLIN, Deceased.
ELSIE E. WITLIN, as Executrix, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
RIO HONDO ASSOCIATES et al., Defendants and Appellants.

Docket No. 51881.

Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Three.

July 26, 1978.

*170 COUNSEL

Hillel Chodos for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Ervin, Cohen & Jessup, Allan Browne, Allan B. Cooper and Allan Gabriel for Defendants and Appellants.

OPINION

COBEY, J.

Defendants, Rio Hondo Associates, an approximately 45-member partnership composed largely of doctors, which owns a successful hospital in Downey, California, and generally those doctors, appeal from a judgment against them entered upon a jury verdict of compensatory damages in the principal sum of $208,869.14 and from an order denying their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Plaintiff, Elsie E. Witlin, as executrix of the estate of her late husband, Dr. Bernard J. Witlin, cross-appeals from the same judgment insofar as it fails to award her any punitive damages.

The basic issue presented by the appeal is whether appellants, in purchasing Dr. Witlin's interest in the partnership for $65,288.40, violated their fiduciary duty to plaintiff of full disclosure. Under the partnership agreement defendants were obligated to pay to plaintiff the fair market value of Dr. Witlin's partnership interest as determined in good faith by the partnership's management committee. This committee fixed the buy-out price of Dr. Witlin's interest on the basis of a certain executory *171 agreement between the partnership and three doctors entered into in the spring of 1971. This price of $24,600 per percentage point was substantially below the $83,905.62 per percentage point that the partnership realized in June 1972, when it sold its assets to Hospital Corporation of America. The jury's challenged award of $208,869.14 in compensatory damages to plaintiff reflects exactly the June 1972 selling price.

This case was improperly tried. The trial court never seemed to realize that the basic issue to be resolved was the state of mind of the management committee regarding the fair market value of the partnership during the period they were engaged in purchasing Dr. Witlin's partnership interest — that is, from September 21, 1971, to February 8, 1972. Stated otherwise, did the $65,288.40 they offered Mrs. Witlin represent in truth and fact their good faith determination of the fair market value of Dr. Witlin's partnership interest. To resolve this good faith issue properly, the jury should have been informed regarding the exact basis of the valuation offered Mrs. Witlin — namely, the $65,288.40 — and of any representations made by the management committee regarding the fair market value of the partnership to at least two of the three conglomerates to which it attempted to sell the partnership between 1969 and June of 1972.

FACTS

On July 4, 1971, Dr. Bernard J. Witlin died. At the time of his death he was a partner in a partnership known as Rio Hondo Associates. The principal asset of this partnership was the Rio Hondo Hospital in Downey.[1]

By letter dated September 21, 1971, the management committee of the partnership timely notified plaintiff, as executrix of her late husband's estate, that the partnership was exercising its option under article 16 of the partnership agreement to purchase Dr. Witlin's 2.654 percent partnership interest for $65,288.40 ($24,600 per percentage point) and noted that this price was in excess of the article 16 price of $42,565.30 that the partnership was purportedly obligated to pay. The letter further informed plaintiff that the offered price per percentage point was that established in an executory agreement between certain doctors and the partnership for the sale to them of a minor interest in the partnership in *172 the spring of 1971. Enclosed with this letter were an evaluation of the partnership and a statement of the various partnership interests, including that of Dr. Witlin, all as of August 31, 1971.

Upon receipt of this letter and its enclosures plaintiff went to see her probate attorney, Bill Gene King, for advice as to whether she should accept the offer. King commenced at once an investigation of the offer's propriety. He ascertained that under article 16 of the partnership agreement the management committee of the partnership was required to make a good faith determination of the fair market value of the equity of all of the partners in the partnership as of the last day of the partnership's fiscal year (this was the calendar year), and then to apportion to each partner his proportionate share of that equity. The overall equity figure was, however, to be adjusted for profits and losses and capital changes occurring after the end of the fiscal year through the last month preceding the month of the offer.

By letter dated September 30, 1971, King informed the management committee that Dr. Witlin had valued his partnership interest at $86,000 shortly before his death and inquired as to the method the committee had used in valuing that interest. King also requested recent appraisals of the physical assets, the most recent balance sheets and the latest county property tax bills.

The general counsel of the partnership replied to this letter of inquiry on or about October 25, 1971. He reiterated that the determination of the value of the partnership had been made in accordance with article 16 but that the partnership had decided to use the higher figure resulting from a bona fide arms-length negotiation between the partnership and several doctors seeking to acquire an interest in the partnership "for its good faith determination" of the value of Dr. Witlin's partnership interest. He enclosed balance sheets of the partnership and the hospital, dated respectively August 31, 1971 and July 31, 1971, and the most recent county tax bills.

From this data King determined a straight book value of the partnership of approximately $1 million and added thereto an estimated appreciation in physical assets of another $1 million as reflected in the county tax bills. He thereupon recommended to his client, Mrs. Witlin, acceptance of the partnership offer of $24,600 per percentage point since his corresponding figure was roughly $20,000 per percentage point.

No one from, or representing, the partnership ever mentioned to King the possibility that the partnership might sell its hospital and related *173 assets. Mrs. Witlin, on the recommendation of her attorney, thereupon accepted the management committee's offer. The mechanics, though, of obtaining the necessary authorizations from the probate court and the commissioner of corporations took several months and it was not until February 8, 1972, that this sale of the partnership was consummated through an exchange of a cashier's check and an executed assignment and receipt.

Meanwhile, some two months earlier on December 10, 1971, the management committee commenced negotiations with Hospital Corporation of America for the sale of all of the partnership's assets to that corporation. These negotiations continued unabated until June 21, 1972, when the parties to them executed an agreement of sale. Under this agreement Hospital Corporation of America paid in cash, through an escrow of its shares, to the partners of the partnership, $8,390,562, or roughly $83,906 per percentage point of partnership interest.

DISCUSSION

1.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Cal. App. 3d 167, 147 Cal. Rptr. 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-witlin-calctapp-1978.