Garling v. Seeley

494 P.2d 39, 16 Ariz. App. 434, 1972 Ariz. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedFebruary 29, 1972
DocketNo. 1 CA-CIV 1510
StatusPublished

This text of 494 P.2d 39 (Garling v. Seeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garling v. Seeley, 494 P.2d 39, 16 Ariz. App. 434, 1972 Ariz. App. LEXIS 552 (Ark. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

HAIRE, Presiding Judge.

This appeal was brought by the defendants Fred C. Garling, Jr., Carol E. Garling and Stanley H. Trezevant, a co-partnership doing business as Garling & Trezevant, from a judgment ordering partition of real property held by the partnership as tenants in common with the plaintiffs, a group of Michigan investors, and ordering defendants to pay plaintiffs a sum determined by the trial court to be the “reasonable rent” for the period of time that defendants operated and managed the apartments located on the real property involved.

The case arises as an aftermath of the construction of the second of two different apartment buildings, one known as Harmony House and the other as the Top of the Tower Building, located on 5th Avenue immediately north of Van Burén in Phoenix, Arizona. The lawsuit results from a dispute emerging from financing arrangements for these buildings.

The Garling & Trezevant partnership was formed in 1962 to construct and operate the two apartment buildings above-mentioned. The first was completed in 1962 and the second in 1964. In late 1963 the defendants, realizing that they would need additional funds to complete the second building, entered into negotiations in Detroit with Fiduciary Research, Inc., through its officer H. J. Miller to obtain investors to raise these funds. These latter named parties were financial advisors to the investing plaintiffs, and were joined as third party defendants in this case. As a result of negotiations between defendants and Fiduciary, a plan evolved under which the investing plaintiffs, primarily physicians in the Detroit area and the plaintiffs here, were to acquire a 50% undivided interest in the two apartment houses. It was contemplated that there would be some 18 to 20 of these investors who would each receive individual deeds to their pro rata undivided share of the property. All of the investors were to lease-back their undivided 50% interest in the two buildings to the defendants for a 10 year period. As a practical matter, what was contemplated was what is commonly referred to in the real estate trade as a sale and lease-back arrangement. The contemplated purchase price of the 50% undivided interest was to be $170,000, which included a commission of $35,000 to the brokers. The contemplated annual rental for the 50% undivided interest would be $17,000 per year.1 Inasmuch as the “Purchase and Lease Agreements” provided that the rental would begin “as of May 1, 1964”, it is apparent that the parties contemplated that the sale of the 50% interest would be fully accomplished by that date. However, the purchases by the individual plaintiffs were not simultaneously consummated, but rather were consummated over a period of approximately 10 months, terminating in February 1965. In fact, only a total of a 45% undivided interest was ever purchased. Individual documents called “Purchase and Lease Agreements” were entered into with each of the individual plaintiffs, and each of the individual plaintiffs received in return a separate deed to his undivided inter[436]*436est in the real property.2 No independent document by way of a formal lease-back agreement was ever made, and one of the major controversies arising in the trial court concerns the necessity of such a formal lease-back agreement.

The evidence reflects that the plaintiffs invested a total of $153,000 for which they acquired an undivided 45% ownership interest in the two apartment houses, subject to substantial mortgages. When the defendants failed to pay in cash the full amount of the above-discussed guaranteed annual rental, the plaintiffs filed a three claim action. The first claim alleged that the parties were tenants in common and sought an accounting. From the allegations of this claim, the exact nature of the accounting sought is uncertain. The second claim asked for a partition of the premises, and the third claim was for contractual rent in the amount of $17,000 per year pursuant to the provisions of the above-mentioned Purchase and Lease Agreements.

By way of answer, the defendants generally contended that the proposed agreement had never been consummated because only a 45% interest had been purchased, and further that plaintiffs were not entitled to “rental” as there had never been executed any formal lease back of the premises as contemplated. In addition, the defendants contended that the entire arrangement was not truly a sale at all but must be considered a mortgage transaction, and a usurious mortgage at that. By way of counterclaims, the defendants asked that title be quieted in themselves, and that the arrangements should be established as a mortgage and the loan declared usurious. Alternatively they contended that the plaintiffs had become partners or joint venturers with the defendants in the operation of the buildings and that in that capacity they had become liable for their share of the costs of operation. Hence they contended that money was due and owing from the plaintiffs to them. The defendants also filed a third party claim against Fiduciary Research, Inc. and its officer Miller, who had been the brokers in the transaction, for the $31,500 that these parties had received out of the transaction.

On October 14, 1968, the parties proceeded to trial on the original pleadings. The admissions in the pleadings and plaintiffs’ evidence established the above-recited facts. In addition, plaintiffs put on expert testimony concerning the value of the properties and introduced through defendants’ certified public accountant the books and records relating to the accounts, management and operation of the apartments. Over the defendants’ objection, the court decided and concluded that it should try the accounting matter itself in open court, without referring it to a master. The “Purchase and Lease Agreements” and the deeds to plaintiffs were also admitted into evidence. Because of later procedural developments, it is important to note that at this first trial the trial court refused to allow plaintiffs to introduce evidence concerning the reasonable rental value for plaintiffs’ 45% undivided interest in the properties. After plaintiffs rested, defendants moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims, and these motions were taken under advisement. Defendants then rested without putting on any evidence relating to its defenses, counterclaims, or third party claims against Fiduciary and Miller. The court then granted defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ third claim (the contractual claim for rent), dismissed defendants’ third party complaint against Fiduciary and Miller, and refused to .allow plaintiffs to amend their first claim so as to convert it from an ambiguous “accounting” claim to a claim for rent due under the agreement of the parties. At that time the court took under advisement a ruling on the merits of plaintiffs’ only remaining claims which [437]*437were for an accounting and for partition. Approximately one week later on October 21, 1968, the court entered its own preliminary findings of fact and conclusions of law and orders. These findings and conclusions demonstrated the court’s reasoning in dismissing plaintiffs’ third claim for rent due under the lease provisions of the Purchase and Lease Agreements. The court found that the Purchase and Lease Agreements “are agreements for leases and not leases”.

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Bluebook (online)
494 P.2d 39, 16 Ariz. App. 434, 1972 Ariz. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garling-v-seeley-arizctapp-1972.