Insulation Corp. v. Berkowitz

644 A.2d 128, 274 N.J. Super. 337, 1994 N.J. Super. LEXIS 290
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 24, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 644 A.2d 128 (Insulation Corp. v. Berkowitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insulation Corp. v. Berkowitz, 644 A.2d 128, 274 N.J. Super. 337, 1994 N.J. Super. LEXIS 290 (N.J. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BROCHIN, J.A.D.

Defendants Steven Berkowitz, M.D., Robert Dennis, M.D., and Roy Mittman, M.D. are orthopedic surgeons. On or about September 10, 1987, they entered into a partnership agreement with Jeffrey A. Donner, Esq., a lawyer, Alvin H. Golden, an accountant, and John Macchiaverna, Jr., a builder, to form a partnership known as Sportsplex Associates. At about the same time, they also organized a corporation, Sportsplex Health and Fitness, Inc. The partnership was formed to acquire an existing health and racquet club and, directly or through the affiliated corporation, to develop a sports center which would include facilities where the doctors would practice sports medicine.

Plaintiff Insulation Corporation of America is in the business of installing insulation in sports facilities. In response to an inquiry [339]*339from Macchiaverna, it submitted a proposal to him dated August 30, 1988, to install insulation in a building owned either by Sportsplex Associates or by the affiliated corporation. The proposal specified a price of $53,486 for the materials and installation. The work was ordered and performed, but was not paid for. The trial court treated the insulation contract as having been entered into with Sportsplex Associates, the partnership, rather than with Sportsplex Health and Fitness, Inc., the corporation, and that ruling has not been contested on appeal.

Sportsplex Associates is bankrupt. Plaintiff sought to collect its debt from the partners. Initially, it sued only Donner, Golden, and Macchiaverna, who were the only partners with whom it had dealt. When plaintiff learned during the course of the litigation that Doctors Berkowitz, Dennis, and Mittman had been partners too, it amended its complaint to sue them also. Donner, Golden, and Macchiaverna have filed petitions in bankruptcy or for reorganization. They have not participated in this appeal.

Berkowitz, Dennis, and Mittman contend that the original Sportsplex Associates partnership, of which they were partners, was dissolved by an agreement executed by all six of the partners on or about April 15, 1988, entitled “Agreement Regarding Sportsplex Associates and Sportsplex Health and Fitness, Inc.” They argue that they are therefore not liable because the debt was incurred without their authorization after dissolution, and the contract for insulation from which the debt arose was not an “act appropriate for winding up partnership affairs or completing transactions unfinished at dissolution” within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 42:l-35(l)(a).

After a bench trial in the Law Division, Judge June Strelecki, J.S.C., agreed with the doctors. Plaintiff has appealed. It contends that when Macchiaverna ordered the insulation, he possessed and exercised the authority to bind the Sportsplex Associates partnership, whether or not this partnership had previously been dissolved, and that, since Berkowitz, Dennis, and Mittman [340]*340were partners, they are jointly and severally liable for the debt of the partnership.

Judge Strelecki determined that the partners’ execution of the April 15,1988 agreement effected the immediate dissolution of the original Sportsplex Associates partnership. For reasons which we discuss subsequently in this opinion, we have concluded that that interpretation of the agreement is correct. On that premise, Macchiaverna incurred the debt to Insulation Corporation of America after the dissolution of the partnership. The liability of Sportsplex Associates,1 and therefore of its partners, is governed by those sections of the Uniform Partnership Act which deal with the authority of a partner to bind a partnership after dissolution.

There are two relevant sections, N.J.S.A. 42:1-33 and -35. Section 33 provides that, as between the partnership and persons who are not partners — the situation in which we are interested— the authority of a partner to bind a partnership after dissolution is governed by Section 35. That section of the Uniform Partnership Act as adopted in New Jersey reads as follows:

1. After dissolution a partner can bind the partnership except as provided in paragraph “3” of this section:
a. By any act appropriate for winding up partnership affairs or completing transactions unfinished at dissolution;
b. By any transaction which would bind the partnership if dissolution had not taken place, provided____
2. The liability of a partner under paragraph “lb” of this section shall be satisfied out of partnership assets alone when such partner had been prior to dissolution.
a. Unknown as a partner to the person with whom the contract is made; and
[341]*341b. So far unknown and inactive in partnership affairs that the business reputation of the partnei'ship could not be said to have been in any degree due to his connection with it.
3 .....
4 .....
[N.J.S.A. 42:1-35.]

None of these provisions of N.J.S.A. 42:1-35 authorized Mac-chiaverna to contract with plaintiff on behalf of Sportsplex Associates in a way that would make Berkowitz, Dennis, and Mittman personally liable to satisfy the debt of the partnership to Insulation Corporation of America out of their non-partnership assets. First of all, subparagraph “(l)(a)” is inapplicable because the contract with Insulation Corporation of America does not meet either of its conditions. The contract was not one for “completing [a] transactionf] unfinished at dissolution” since the proposal which resulted in the contract was not submitted to Macchiaverna until on or about August 30, 1988, long after the April 15, 1988, date of the dissolution agreement. As the trial judge found on the basis of evidence in the record whose adequacy is undisputed, the contract was not “appropriate for winding up partnership affairs” because

[a]n improvement such as installing insulation in this case does not constitute an, action for the purpose of winding up partnership affairs---- Also, there is no evidence before the court that the application of insulation resulted in an increased purchase price for the property or conferred any other benefit for the purposes of winding up.

Subparagraph “(l)(b)” does not provide the authorization to bind the partnership because the facts of this case do not meet the conditions of either subparagraph “(l)(b)(I)” or of “(l)(b)(II).” If Sportsplex Associates was dissolved on April 15, 1988, subpara-graph “(l)(b)(I)” is inapplicable because plaintiff did not “extend credit to the partnership prior to dissolution [without] knowledge of the dissolution;” subparagraph “(l)(b)(II)” is inapplicable because plaintiff did not “know[ ] of the partnership prior to dissolution. ...”

Paragraphs “3” and “4” of N.J.S.A 42:1-35 are also entirely inapplicable to the present case. Subparagraph “(3)(a)” deals with [342]*342a partnership which is dissolved because carrying on the business of the partnership would be unlawful; there is no suggestion that the business of Sportsplex Associates was illegal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
644 A.2d 128, 274 N.J. Super. 337, 1994 N.J. Super. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insulation-corp-v-berkowitz-njsuperctappdiv-1994.