In re N. C. Carroll & Sons Gravel Co.

95 F. Supp. 591, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2642
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1951
DocketBankr. No. 296-B-1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 F. Supp. 591 (In re N. C. Carroll & Sons Gravel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re N. C. Carroll & Sons Gravel Co., 95 F. Supp. 591, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2642 (D. Kan. 1951).

Opinion

MELLOTT, Chief Judge.

The issues presently before the court arise upon petitions to review orders of the referee in bankruptcy. In the petition filed on behalf of two of the bankrupts — E. Lee Carroll and Gale R. Carroll — it is charged the referee erred in refusing to set apart to each a tract of 160 acres claimed as an exempt homestead. In' the other, the validity of an order made by the referee, denying the claim of a daughter of two of the bankrupts and a sister of the other two that she was the owner of certain real estate at bankruptcy, . is assailed. The issues will be considered in the order stated.

Summarizing the uncontroverted findings of the referee, the -partnership and the four partners, on February 8, 1950, were adjudged bankrupts. The five cases were duly consolidated. About 1938 the four individual bankrupts, husband, wife and two sons, who then had very little property, entered into the business of constructing roads under contracts with the State Highway Commission of the State of Kansas. They prospered and the partnership appears to have had a net worth of approximately $46,000 in 1943. During that yeaf. the partners purchased a ranch in Wabaunsee county, which-they stocked with cattle and other livestock. At about that time they entered into a written partnership contract, which has been lost, agreeing to do business under the partnership name shown in the caption hereof, although in some instances transactions were carried on in some other name. • The referee has found that “in whatever form the name was used it was the intent and purpose of the parties that they were doing business as a partnership, consisting of the four parties, in which they shared equally in the profits and losses.”

The referee also- found, and this is the only finding assailed by the two bankrupts who have petitioned the court for review, .that the partners had agreed “They were equal owners in the property then [i. e. 1943] owned by them.” However, they also contend the referee placed too much reliance upon income tax returns and financial statements, arguing that the making of the returns “was due to their inexperience in bookkeeping and accounting and does not show that the farm land and homes” in issue, were “intended to be partnership property rather than belonging to” the bankrupts E. Lee Carroll and Gale R. Carroll. But to return to a recitation of the basic facts shown in the findings.

From the beginning of the partnership various financial statements, some prepared by certified public accountants, -were filed, listing property having a substantial value in addition to “a farm in Wabaunsee county of the value of” $44,000 or more. Regular annual income tax statements filed with the collector of internal revenue were all made in the name of the partnership and showed the interest of each of the partners to be a one-fourth interest in the Wabaunsee county farm, as well as in the other partnership property.

The record title to the Wabaunsee county ranch, which was carried as an asset of the partnership, was in the name of N. C. Carroll. On February 23, 1949, N. C. Carroll and his wife, Vera E. Carroll, -entered into a contract of sale of the ranch for a consideration of $90,000, to'be paid by the purchaser as follows: by assuming a mortgage of $17,000, conveying the title.to an apartment house in Manhattan, Kansas, [593]*593of the value of $45,000, and paying the balance of $28,000 in cash. The contract was fully executed. The title to the apartment house in Manhattan was taken in the name of Vera E. Carroll. The $28,000 cash was paid into the partnership account and used in the payment of partnership debts and in the conduct of the business of the partnership. A loan of $20,000 was obtained on the apartment house and the proceeds thereof were paid into, and became a part of, the partnership fund and this amount was also used in the operation of the partnership business.

In May, 1949, N. C. Carroll negotiated the purchase of 400 acres of land in Jackson and Pottawatomie counties, Kansas, for a consideration of $14,000. Seven Thousand Five Hundred ($7,500) Dollars of this amount was paid out of the partnership funds, the balance of the purchase price being derived from a loan of $6,500 on the land by an insurance company. The title to the land was taken in the name of E. Lee Carroll and Gale R. Carroll, the deeds being recorded on June 14, 1949.

On February 7, 1950, E. Lee Carroll and Gale R. Carroll each executed a deed to the other for a stated consideration of One Dollar, reciting a conveyance to each grantee of 160 acres of the Jackson county land. Each of 'the bankrupts was married and had previously moved his family into one of the houses located on the property described in the deed above referred to, and each, with his family, was living on the tract described at the time the petitions in bankruptcy were filed. The wives of the respective grantors in the deeds did not join in the execution of the deeds and each deed contained a clause reciting: “All of the above parcels totaling One Hundred Sixty (160) acres, more or less, * * * being hereby set aside as the homestead of * * * in accordance with G.S. 60-3502, Kansas Statutes.”

Extended discussion of the principles of homestead exemptions under the Bankruptcy Act and the statutes of Kansas seems not to be required. Th parties agree that three things must exist — ownership, family and residence. They also agree, as found by the referee, that the last two exist in this proceeding. The point of difference is whether the referee’s finding and conclusion that ownership in the claimants has not been proven, is correct.

After making thirteen detailed findings, only one of which is assailed, the referee summed up his views in this language:

“The fact is well established that at the beginning of this partnership it was agreed that all of the property owned by the individual members should become and be considered the property of the partnership. The subsequent conduct of the parties shows clearly that this was their purpose and intent. When the ranch was purchased it was taken in the name of N. C. Carroll. When it was sold the proceeds from the ranch were placed immediately in the funds belonging to the partnership and used in carrying on the business of the partnership. The title to the apartment house in Manhattan was taken in the name of Vera E. Carroll, one of the partners. It was immediately mortgaged and the proceeds from the mortgage went into the partnership and was used in the partnership business. The land in question was purchased with partnership funds and legal title taken in the name of the objector hereto-. At no place in the record or in the conduct of the parties do we find any individual claim to the property until we reach the question of the homestead. It seems to me that the fair interpretation of the partnership contract, supplemented by the conduct of the parties, is such that the court can not avoid finding that the land in question was partnership property and if partnership property, the obj ectors are not -entitled to claim it as a homestead.

“The deeds dated February 7, 1950, and recorded February 9, 1950, have, in my judgment, no bearing on the case. If a homestead could have been established it came into being when the home was established on the land. The deeds do- not have the joint consent of husband and wife, and if a homestead existed they would be void under the Constitution. On the other hand two of the partners, in a partnership consisting of four people, can not, by a conveyance, destroy the title of the partnership.”

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95 F. Supp. 591, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-n-c-carroll-sons-gravel-co-ksd-1951.