Jewell v. Harper

285 P.2d 133, 205 Or. 1, 1955 Ore. LEXIS 306
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 285 P.2d 133 (Jewell v. Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jewell v. Harper, 285 P.2d 133, 205 Or. 1, 1955 Ore. LEXIS 306 (Or. 1955).

Opinion

PERRY, J.

This is an appeal .from a partnership accounting had pursuant to a determination by this court that a partnership existed between George Harper and William Jewell.

A statement of the facts surrounding the partnership is set out in the original opinion, Jewell v. Harper, 199 Or 223, 258 P2d 115, 260 P2d 784. However, for the sake of clarity in discussing the issues now before us, we will again set out some of the salient facts.

*3 In July, 1946, George Harper, an nncle of William Jewell, proposed that Jewell come to work for him, stating that he wonld give Jewell 30 head of heifers, and that when Jewell had “worked these cattle np to 200 head” he would take him in as a partner. This offer was accepted by Jewell, and almost immediately Mr. and Mrs. Jewell took up their residence at the Harper ranch. During the time that Jewell was working “these cattle up to 200 head”, Harper was to furnish the cost and expense of the operation, feed, etc., for the cattle, and Jewell was to receive no wages or remuneration of any kind.

The records in this case show that during the years 1946 and 1947, and until the latter part of the year 1948, the proceeds derived from the sales of cattle from the ranch were kept separate and divided according to the individual ownership of the animals sold. In the latter part of 1948, Harper and Jewell, desiring to purchase an airplane to be used in the cattle business, and also desiring to provide a more adequate water supply on the ranch, executed a promissory note in the sum of $9,431 to the Western Idaho Production Credit Association of Caldwell, Idaho, and secured the same with a chattel mortgage, describing therein, as all of the cattle owned by Harper and Jewell, the following chattels:

Harper represented at this time that the property belonged to the partnership. Also, for the tax year 1949- *4 1950 for the first time this personal property upon the Harper ranch was listed for taxation as being the property of Harper and Jewell.

The records in this case disclose no sales of any cattle by either of the parties subsequent to the execution of the mortgage and prior to the death of these parties, both Harper and Jewell having perished in a common disaster on February 3, 1949; consequently there were no profits to account for prior to the dissolution of the partnership.

Within a short time after the deaths of Harper and Jewell, the defendant Goldie Mae Harper, widow of George Harper, went out to the ranch. Mrs. Harper testified that the winter of 1949-1950 was very cold and hard upon livestock; that when she arrived at the ranch the cattle were in very bad condition, and a good many were dead in the fields; “some were dead just outside of the fences, and we had calves that were dead”.

Subsequently the cattle on the ranch were inventoried, and this inventory disclosed that there were 318 head of cattle of various ages and sexes branded “AA”, that being the brand used by Harper, 180 head branded with the “Spear A”, that being the brand used by Jewell, and 11 head branded “45”. The combined total listed under these brands is 509 head, being 47 head short of the total listed under the mortgage given to the Western Idaho Production Credit Association. We find no evidence in this case showing the brands upon the cattle that died. It is, therefore, reasonable that the losses were proportionate, and in translating this loss back in the proportion of each partner’s contribution to the cattle inventoried to the date of the chattel mortgage, the record shows that at the time of the execution of the mortgage there were *5 347 head of cattle bearing the Harper brand, and 209 head (including the 11 head branded “45”) bearing the Jewell brand. We are convinced from the record that the partnership was formed shortly prior to the execution of the chattel mortgage, and that the contribution of each partner was as set out above.

This was a solvent partnership, and the trial court determined that there was an equal partnership established, not only as to the profits, but in all the assets of the partnership after payment of debts and costs of liquidation on dissolution.

It is true that the record contains numerous statements by individuals that George Harper represented that he and Jewell were partners, and in some instances that they were equal partners, but it appears to us that he was referring to present conditions which would include the profits from the operation, and was not speaking at any time of or taking into consideration the interest of each in case of a termination of the partnership relation.

Since there is no evidence of any agreement to the contrary, the rules for distribution of assets in settling accounts between partners set out in OES 68.620 must be followed in determining the liabilities of the partnership and their order of payment. After payment of the liquidating expenses, insofar as is applicable to the facts of this case, the statute provides, first, for the payment of creditors, and, next, for the payment of moneys owing to the partners in respect to the capital contributed.

In determining the capital advanced by each of the partners to the partnership, we have considered those advances, both in relation to the value of cattle at the time of the formation of the partnership and in relation to the number of cattle contributed by each. After full *6 consideration of each method, we are forced to conclude that we are unable from the record to reach a satisfactory appraisal of the monetary value of the cattle at the time of the formation of the partnership, and must, therefore, for the purposes of liquidation use the number of cattle that each contributed, considering them of equal value without respect to age or sex. Our conclusion, therefor, is that Mrs. Harper, as liquidating agent, shall pay to Mrs. Jewell, as administratrix of the William Jewell estate, 209/556ths of the partnership assets remaining after the payment of the debts and liquidation expenses of the partnership.

The defendant’s claim of 200 tons of hay grown upon the ranch as a contribution to the capital of the partnership cannot be considered as a contribution to capital since George Harper had agreed prior to the formation of any partnership to provide the necessary hay for the feeding of all of the cattle in return for the labor to be performed by Jewell upon the ranch; but if it could be said that the hay was produced subsequent to the formation of the partnership, then it is equally true that it was produced by the partnership.

A mathematical review of the record indicates that the contribution of each of the parties to the miscellaneous articles, — such as, machinery, animals, and equipment — used in the operation was approximately of equal value. These items of the partnership will be treated in the same ratio as the division of the partnership assets at its dissolution.

The defendant also complains of the trial court including in the accounting 11 animals branded “45” which were sold for the sum of $941.55. The basis of the defendant’s claim is that each of the animals branded “45” displayed the brand that was registered in her name.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P.2d 133, 205 Or. 1, 1955 Ore. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-harper-or-1955.