Hollis v. Rock Creek Pack Station

594 F. Supp. 156, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15117
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedJuly 9, 1984
DocketCV-R-82-135-ECR
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 594 F. Supp. 156 (Hollis v. Rock Creek Pack Station) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollis v. Rock Creek Pack Station, 594 F. Supp. 156, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15117 (D. Nev. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER

EDWARD G. REED, Jr., District Judge.

The plaintiff, Pawl Hollis (Pawl) brought this action seeking to establish that he was a partner of the defendants in an enterprise known as the Rock Creek Pack Station (Rock Creek) during the period from January 1 to November 1, 1981. 1 Rock Creek is in the business of outfitting and guiding pack trips in the eastern Sierras. It is owned by the London defendants: Herbert, the father, (Herb), Marjorie, the mother, (Marjorie) 2 and their son, Dr. Craig London, (Craig). Pawl is a citizen of Nevada and the defendants are citizens of California. The jurisiction of this court is invoked under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.

Pawl and Craig grew up together in Bishop, California, and were “best friends”. Herb knew Pawl from the time he was a small boy. Pawl worked on and off for Rock Creek for a period of about ten years (1971-1981). He worked at first on a gratis basis, helping out as a friend of the Londons, and later became an employee. When he was in high school Pawl was employed as a cook by Rock Creek and later became an expert packer for the wilderness pack trips conducted for the customers of Rock Creek. Most of Rock Creek’s pack trips are conducted during the summer months from approximately the first of June until the middle of September or first of October. Other business is transacted during the off season, including stock tending, ranch chores, vehicle maintenance, organizing pack trips for subsequent years, soliciting of business, bookkeeping, and tax work.

During a portion of the period involved here Pawl was seeking a teaching credential from the University of Nevada in Reno. In the summers of 1979 and 1980 he assisted with Rock Creek pack trips and attended college in the winter time. Pawl became interested in becoming a partner in Rock Creek during 1979 and particularly in 1980 after he completed his college education. Pawl’s long-range goals were to teach school and also to make a career of packing. Since the principal activity in packing is in the summer when school is in recess the dual careers mesh very well together. In 1979, Pawl therefore approached Craig and Herb with regard to the possibility of becoming a partner in Rock Creek.

First Agreement

In 1980,. prior to the commencement of the packing season, serious discussions took place between Herb, Craig and Pawl concerning how Pawl might become a partner of the enterprise. The Londons and Pawl were very interested in having Pawl come into the business as a partner. On March 1, 1980 Herb prepared an estimated *158 valuation of the assets of Rock Creek for use by the parties in negotiating Pawl’s acquisition of an interest in the Rock Creek partnership. The value Herb placed on the assets of the business was $420,000.00. After study with his consultant, Pawl placed a value of $275,000 on the assets and the parties eventually compromised at a figure of $350,000. The parties agreed that Pawl would acquire a one-third interest in Rock Creek for a purchase price of $116,666.66 at a down payment of 26%, with the balance to be amortized over a 15 year period at 10% interest. According to this arrangement Pawl was to work from June 1 to October 15, 1980, for $1,000.00 a month and to receive an additional bonus of $5,000.00 (at $1,000.00 per month) for completing the season. The parties agreed that the bonus would be applied toward the down payment. They set up a schedule for completing the transaction, which provided for agreement in principle by April 1, 1980, and a final formalized arrangement by November 1, 1980.

The parties went ahead with the arrangement through the packing year of 1980, but when November 1 arrived Pawl did not have the money available to make the anticipated down payment and hence the '¡Agreement for him to acquire an interest in the partnership fell through. The parties did not give up, however, and continued discussions and negotiations looking to Pawl’s acquisition of an interest in the partnership in the following year.

Second Agreement

On December 21, 1980, a meeting was held by Pawl, Craig and Herb. The $350,-000.00 total value was reexamined and the parties appear to have tentatively agreed at that time that Pawl would acquire a one-third interest in Rock Creek for a price of $116,666.66 with a down payment of 26.38%, or $30,333.33. The down payment was to be loaned to Pawl by the Londons at the then current rate of interest. The $5,000.00 bonus which had been discussed in 1980 was to be credited to the down payment, reducing it to $25,333.33. 3 The balance of the purchase price, over and above the downpayment, was to be payable at 10% interest over a period of 15 years either on a monthly or yearly basis. This tentative agreement is for the most part memorialized in a letter from Pawl to Herb, dated December 30, 1980 (Exh. E).

Herb took Pawl’s letter to Willis Smith, an attorney practicing in Bishop, California, and consulted with him about the transaction. On January 6, 1981, Mr. Smith wrote to Herb analyzing the transaction and making certain suggestions. He recommended that the $5,000.00 1980 bonus which the parties had agreed would be applied to the down payment, instead be subtracted from the purchase price, reducing it to $111,666.66. This would avoid, payment of income tax by Pawl on the $5,000.00 bonus and diminish capital gains taxes on Pawl’s payments to the Londons. The effect of Mr. Smith’s proposals is to reduce the agreed overall value of the assets of the partnership. Mr. Smith also reviewed the various types of business organizations which would be most advantageous to the parties both from a legal and tax viewpoint. He recommended that a Subchapter S corporation be formed so as to retain the benefits of partnership-type taxation and to obtain the benefits of the limited liability of a corporation. 4

Third Agreement

By the end of March 1981 the parties had finally agreed to an arrangement whereby Rock Creek would become a Subchapter S corporation as of November 1, 1981, and Pawl would purchase a one-third interest in the corporation for the figure of $111,-666.66. A down payment of $25,333.33 *159 was to be paid in three installments as follows:

Nov. 1, 1981: $8444.44 plus interest on $25,333.33 for 10 months @ 20.25% for total of $12,719.44.
April 1, 1982: $8444.44 plus interest on $16,888.88 @ 20.25% for five months.
September 1, 1982: $8444.44 plus interest @ 20.25% for four months.

According to this agreement, the balance of the purchase price was to be due in annual installment payments over a 15-year period at 10% interest commencing November 1, 1981.

On this basis, under the agreement, Pawl would owe the following sums on November 1, 1981 in order to close the transaction:

First portion of down payment $12,719.44
Annua] payment on balance 11,133.60

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
594 F. Supp. 156, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollis-v-rock-creek-pack-station-nvd-1984.