In Re the Estate of Glant

356 P.2d 707, 57 Wash. 2d 309, 1960 Wash. LEXIS 479
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1960
Docket35300
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 356 P.2d 707 (In Re the Estate of Glant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Estate of Glant, 356 P.2d 707, 57 Wash. 2d 309, 1960 Wash. LEXIS 479 (Wash. 1960).

Opinion

Ott, J.

Samuel Giant, at the time of his death, owned a 22.54% interest in the Pacific Iron and Metal Company, a partnership which had been engaged in the waste materials business for a period exceeding thirty-eight years. By the terms of his will, Fay Phyllis Giant, his widow, was bequeathed a 7.51% interest in the company. Pursuant to RCW 11.64.030, the surviving partners petitioned the court to fix the price and determine the terms of sale of the interest bequeathed to Mrs. Giant, in accordance with the purchase preference rights afforded surviving partners by the statute.

A pretrial conference was held which resulted in an order being entered setting out the admitted facts and defining the items of dispute. At the hearing upon the petition, the court fixed the total value of the partnership at $562,370.87, and computed the widow’s 7.51% interest at $39,129.90. Because the widow elected to receive interest on the value *311 of her share from January 1, 1959, to the date of the judgment (rather than share in the profits or losses of the partnership during the settlement period), she was awarded the sum of $1,239.11, or a total payment of $40,369.01.

The court fixed the terms for payment of the purchase price as follows: $10,369.01 down payment, and the sums of $10,000 on or before July 10th of 1960, 1961, and 1962, with interest on the deferred balance payable quarterly at the rate of 5% per annum. The surviving partners were to execute an installment note, jointly and severally, and, upon the widow’s accepting the terms of the sale, she was to transfer her interest in the partnership to them.

The partnership was indebted to its bank in the sum of $210,000, being the unpaid balance of an unsecured loan in the original amount of $260,000. As a further condition of the purchase, the surviving partners were to execute a renewal note to the bank, and the estate of Samuel Giant released of its liability upon the partnership indebtedness.

Findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment were entered. The widow appeals, and asserts eight assignments of error.

By assignment No. 1, the appellant urges that the court erred in departing from the pretrial order and allowing proof of an omitted item, referred to in the record as the Umatilla transaction, which reduced the net worth of the partnership by $22,797.36. It is the appellant’s contention that she was “deprived ... of a fair trial and prejudiced ... by surprise inclusion of a new issue.” The pretrial order expressly permitted unlisted exhibits to be admitted at the time of trial where good cause was shown, and also provided that “this order shall not be amended, except by order of the court . . . or to prevent manifest injustice.”

The record discloses that the Umatilla transaction was partnership business and an allowable item to reduce the net worth of the partnership, also that neither party was aware of the fact that it had been inadvertently omitted by the partnership’s accountants until after the pretrial order had been entered and the petition came on for hearing. Al *312 though appellant objected to the admission of proof of this transaction, she did not claim surprise and move for a continuance, nor did she make an offer of proof to establish the invalidity of the item.

The office of the pretrial conference is to expedite the final determination of the issues being litigated. Its use is not to operate as a barrier to the presentation of material facts at the trial, which were not considered at the pretrial conference because they were mutually unknown, and which became known to the parties subsequently.

We find no merit in appellant’s first assignment of error.

Appellant’s second assignment relates to the trial court’s finding of fact that the partnership’s good will, if any, had no value. The court found that

“ . . . The reputation for integrity, fair dealing and competent management that has been built up through the years is personal to Julius Giant and Earle T. Giant and does not inhere in the partnership apart from them. There is no good will in the scrap business in the sense of a sale-able asset.” (Italics ours.)

The good will of a going business is an element which inheres in it and cannot be separated from the whole. Stanton v. Zercher, 101 Wash. 383, 172 Pac. 559 (1918). There are many elements, defined in the decisions of this court and other jurisdictions, which comprise good will. Among these are continuity of name, location, reputation for honesty and fair dealing, individual talents and ability of the members of the going business organization, and many others. J. L. Cooper & Co. v. Anchor Securities Co., 9 Wn. (2d) 45, 113 P. (2d) 845 (1941). Good will is an intangible element that inheres in the value of a going business.

The record before us discloses that Pacific Iron and Metal Company has operated in the same locale for over thirty-eight years, and continues to do so. From its inception, it has been comprised of the same key personnel, who are men of exceptional ability in their chosen field of endeavor, and who have acquired such stature in the business world, over the years, that the partnership was able to borrow more *313 than one quarter of a million dollars from its bank on an unsecured loan.

Appellant’s expert witness testified that he made a careful analysis of the business involved and, after applying an approved formula for determining the value of this intangible element of a going business under nearly identical management, arrived at the conclusion that this business had a good-will valuation of $55,185.50. Appellant’s 7.51% share of this good-will value is $4,144.43.

The only evidence offered to the contrary was that of the surviving partners. They testified, inter alia, that they had previously purchased two scrap businesses, the consideration for which was based upon inventory values, and that no additional amount was paid for good will. One of these businesses they liquidated immediately; the other they continued to operate under its original name. The survivors further testified that they had never heard of a junk business being sold or purchased with any consideration paid for the good will. This testimony was all of a negative nature. It did not establish that there was no good-will value in connection with the Pacific Iron and Metal Company’s scrap business, as it was conducted by its talented personnel over the thirty-eight years, and which the survivors had operated without interruption since the death of Samuel Giant and expected to continue at the same locale with the same remaining personnel.

We are convinced that the evidence does not sustain the trial court’s finding that the partnership had no good will upon which a value could be determined, and that the court erred in its finding that it had no such value at the time of decedent’s death.

Assignment No. 3 relates to the trial court’s use of 12.29% as the measure of the average gross profit to be deducted from the partnership assets, in order to arrive at the company’s net worth.

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Bluebook (online)
356 P.2d 707, 57 Wash. 2d 309, 1960 Wash. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-glant-wash-1960.