Hall v. TWS, INC.

113 P.3d 1207, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2005 WL 1367822
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 2005
DocketS-10878
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 P.3d 1207 (Hall v. TWS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. TWS, INC., 113 P.3d 1207, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2005 WL 1367822 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In an action to collect on a judgment against Raymond Moore, TWS, Inc. obtained a charging order against his interest in a purported mining partnership with Joe B. Hall and subsequently purchased his interest at a foreclosure sale and sued to dissolve the partnership. The superior court found that, although Moore and Hall formed a partnership at will in 1990, the partnership was dissolved in 1993 when Hall filed for bankruptcy and no new partnership was subsequently created. Accordingly, the court ruled that Moore and Hall held the mining claims as tenants in common and, therefore, *1208 that TWS could reach Moore’s fifty percent interest in the claims to satisfy its judgment against him. We affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Hall and Moore purchased thirty-five mining claims 1 in 1990 in the name of “Ray Moore and Joe B. Hall d/b/a Golden Slipper II.” Shortly thereafter, Moore approached Clifford Cook, a childhood friend and a resident of Georgia, for funds to pay expenses related to annual labor and filing fees in exchange for an ownership interest in part of the claims. Cook continued to provide Moore with funds until 1996 when, after traveling to Fairbanks to formalize their business relationship, Cook determined that Moore did not intend to grant him an ownership interest in the mining claims. Cook subsequently obtained a judgment against Moore in Georgia to recover the funds he had advanced, and he sued in Alaska for recognition and enforcement of that judgment. In April 1999 the superior court entered judgment against Moore in the amount of $57,508.89, and Cook later assigned this judgment to TWS, Inc., a Georgia corporation owned by Cook.

To collect on this judgment, Cook attempted to seize Moore’s shares in Golden Slipper II, Inc., a corporation owned jointly by Moore and Hall. Cook believed that the corporation owned the Marshall Dome claims or some other assets. During a deposition with Hall in November 1999, however, Hall testified that the claims were not held by Golden Slipper II, Inc., a corporation, but by Golden Slipper II, a mining partnership formed through an oral partnership agreement between Hall and Moore. Hall testified that he and Moore each owned a fifty percent share of the partnership, but that they had assigned a thirty-five percent interest in the partnership proceeds to two attorneys who had provided legal representation to the partnership and to Hall personally. Hall testified that no other parties had an interest in the partnership. Hall also testified that he had filed for bankruptcy in 1993. While he was uncertain whether the bankruptcy was discharged in 1995 or 1997, the record shows that the bankruptcy trustee sold his interest in the claims in 1996. 2

In December 1999 Cook obtained a charging order against Moore’s individual interest in the partnership, and the partnership was ordered to distribute to Cook all earnings and withdrawals that would be payable to Moore. 3 This order also granted Cook authority to sell Moore’s interest at a foreclosure sale, and TWS subsequently purchased Moore’s interest at a foreclosure sale held in February 2000. Immediately thereafter, TWS notified Hall of its purchase and demanded that the partnership provide it with records related to the partnership and its ownership of the mining claims. After reviewing some of the records, TWS recommended that the partnership be dissolved and its assets distributed to Hall and TWS. Hall later informed TWS that Moore had assigned his entire interest to other creditors prior to the foreclosure sale and that TWS had consequently purchased no interest in the partnership. TWS suspected that the alleged assignments were an attempt to prevent collection and brought suit against Hall, Moore, and Golden Slipper II, alleging that no partnership existed and that the claims were held by Moore and Hall as tenants in common and, in the alternative, for appointment of a receiver and for dissolution of the *1209 partnership. Moore did not defend in the superior court.

During the course of the litigation, Hall and Golden Slipper II failed to respond to discovery requests served by TWS, despite two orders by the superior court compelling Hall to provide the information, which was relevant to whether Moore and Hall owned the mining claims as tenants in partnership or as tenants in common, finable to adequately prepare for trial, TWS filed a motion for sanctions, which the superior court resolved at trial by limiting Hall’s defense to evidence it had already produced, consisting primarily of his 1999 deposition testimony and attachments. Hall’s counsel agreed to this limitation without objection. While the superior court suggested that Hall’s failure to provide the requested information was “willful or contemptuous,” the parties agreed to proceed with trial so long as evidence to support Hall’s defense was limited to information provided to TWS before trial. This ruling prevented Hall from introducing additional evidence to prove the existence of a partnership with Moore, as well as records relating to his bankruptcy.

TWS argued that Moore and Hall owned the claims as tenants in common, but that, if a partnership did exist, the court should appoint, a receiver and dissolve the partnership so that its assets could be distributed to Hall and TWS. Hall defended that the claims were owned by a partnership formed in 1990 with the purchase of the Marshall Dome claims. According to Hall, the partnership agreement was oral but its existence was proven by a 1990 deed made out in the name of “Ray Moore and Joe B. Hall d/b/a/ Golden Slipper II.” The alleged partnership had no letterhead, phone number, bank account, or tax identification number, nor did it ever file federal income tax returns. For many of the years in question, Hall filed tax returns as a sole proprietor, listing his business name as Golden Slipper II.

The superior court noted that, even if Hall and Moore had formed a partnership in 1990, it would have been dissolved by operation of law when Hall filed for bankruptcy in 1993. 4 If the partnership was dissolved in 1993 and not subsequently re-formed, the contested mining claims would have been held by Moore and Hall as tenants in common, rendering the suit unnecessary. After it became clear that neither the parties nor their attorneys were well-versed in the law of partnership and did not understand the potential implications of the bankruptcy petition, the court adjourned to permit them to research the impact of Hall’s 1993 bankruptcy on the continued existence of the Golden Slipper II partnership. When the trial resumed, Hall argued that, although the partnership was dissolved in 1993, it was immediately reformed with the same assets.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 P.3d 1207, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2005 WL 1367822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-tws-inc-alaska-2005.