Jones v. Shatina

471 P.2d 110, 2 Wash. App. 873, 1970 Wash. App. LEXIS 1213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 15, 1970
DocketNo. 371-41327-1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 471 P.2d 110 (Jones v. Shatina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Shatina, 471 P.2d 110, 2 Wash. App. 873, 1970 Wash. App. LEXIS 1213 (Wash. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

James, C. J.

This action involves the title to 80 acres of raw land near Black Diamond valued at $96,000.

With the permission of the landowner, John C. Jones first began prospecting on the tract in the early 1930’s. He and [874]*874his partner worked weekends, vacations, and days when they were laid off from their regular jobs as coal miners. His first partner in the project was killed by the cave-in of a shaft they had dug. Jones then took in Valentine Shatina as his partner. After Jones and Shatina had worked together for about 6 months, Davies, the landowner, told them they would have to buy the land if they wished to continue prospecting. Neither had enough money, so they decided to take in a more solvent third party, August W. Mattson.

The partners purchased the land from Davies for $1,080, which Mattson supplied. They agreed that Jones and Sha-tina were each to contribute $1,000 to equalize the partners’ capital contributions. None of the understandings between the partners was in writing. The three men had been fellow miners, and Jones and Shatina had been friends for most of their adult lives.

The warranty deed from Davies, dated June 26, 1942, names Jones, Mattson, and Shatina as grantees.

All three men worked in their spare time to develop the property. They kept no books or records, but Jones and Mattson testified that Jones contributed his $1,000 by renting machinery and purchasing equipment and supplies. Both testified that Shatina contributed nothing but his labor and the use of his tools.

Shatina died on. September 6, 1947. He had ceased working on the property about 6 months before his death. No merchantable coal had been found. Jones testified without objection that the property had a value of about $300 when Shatina died.

Shatina left no will. Thomas O. Hansen, the undertaker who arranged the funeral (and who thus' became a creditor of the estate), was appointed to administer Shatina’s estate. .The attorney for the estate was H. I. Kyle, a longtime Eriumclaw attorney. Both Hansen and Kyle were deceased at the time df trial.

Shhtíña’s intérests in the-partnership and in the 80-acre [875]*875tract were not. included' in the inventory of -the estate’s assets. ' ■ -

Jones and Mattson attempted to sell the property in 1967. They were frustrated in their attempt because of the cloud created by Shatina’s name on Davies’ deed. By this action begun in February, 1968, Jones and Mattson seek a judgment quieting title in themselves as against any claim of Shatina’s heirs. The heirs ask that they be adjudged owners of an undivided one-third interest in the property. The trial judge quieted title in Jones and Mattson free of any interest in the heirs of Shatina.

The conclusions of law demonstrate that the trial judge felt that several legal theories supported his ultimate conclusion that Jones and Mattson should prevail. They are waiver, statute of limitations, adverse possession, laches, and equitable estoppel.

The quiddity of partnership real' property held in the name of individual partners as tenants in common has not been free from doubt. See 40 Am. Jur. Partnership § 110-112 (1942). The legal fiction indulged is that for some purposes partnership realty becomes personalty.1 It is in writing the final chapter,' dealing with death’s dissolution of the partnership, that the courts have experienced difficulty in reconciling the fiction with the fact.

In Hannegan v. Roth, 12 Wash. 65, 70, 40 P. 636 (1895), the court held that surviving partners

are not even entitled to the custody and control of the partnership property, as such property is here subject to administration by the “administrator of the partnership,” and he is entitled to the exclusive custody thereof.

In 1895 (the year in which Hannegan was decided) the statutory provisions concerning the administration of partnership property did not differ materially from those which were in effect at the time of Shatina’s death. At the time of [876]*876Shatina’s death, Laws of 1917, ch. 156, § 88, p. 664 provided that the administrator of the estate of a deceased partner was to include in a separate schedule in the inventory of the estate the whole of the property of such partnership. The statutes also provided that after inventory the partnership property should be in the custody and control of the administrator for the purposes of administration unless a surviving partner sought and was granted the right to administer the partnership estate. In Hannegan, as in this case surviving partners sought a decree quieting title to partnership realty in them. As was pointed out by Chief Justice Hoyt in his dissent upon rehearing, Hannegan v. Roth, 12 Wash. 695, 699, 44 P. 256 (1896), the majority seems to have ignored the rule in Dyer v. Morse, 10 Wash. 492, 39 P. 138 (1895), a case decided but 5 months earlier. The court in Dyer held that a surviving partner has a common law right to take possession of partnership property “as his own to reimburse himself for the moneys advanced by him in paying the debts of the firm, . . .” Dyer v. Morse, supra at 495. And if

for that purpose he had paid out a sum in excess of the value of all [the partner’s] property. ... a court of equity will sustain his self-asserted title to the property, if at that time it would have been in his power to have conveyed the property to another for the purpose of paying such debts.

Dyer v. Morse, supra at 495.

The court further observed that the statutory provisions establishing the mechanics of dealing with partnership property after dissolution by death of a partner were to be construed as an aid to the common law.

[I]t cannot be presumed that the legislature intended by its enactment to destroy the common law interest of a surviving partner which had theretofore existed. If such rights were cut off, in what capacity would the surviving partner hold, until such time as some one over whom he had no control-should put the statuté in motion? We are unable to think, of jany status under which he could so hold 'which would be at all satisfactory, or .would not be [877]*877productive of gross injustice to the surviving partner. He could undoubtedly be compelled to pay the partnership debts, and, if he could make no use of the partnership property for that purpose, would have to pay them out of his own funds, and by the negligence or default of the representatives of the deceased partner might be kept from reimbursing himself for moneys thus advanced for an indefinite period. Such a result could not have been intended by the legislature, and the language used in its enactments must not be so construed as to effect it, unless it is the only construction possible.

Dyer v. Morse, supra at 496.

By the time of Shatina’s death, this state had adopted the Uniform Partnership Act, Laws of 1945, ch. 137 (now RCW Title 25), which in large degree statutorily confirms the court’s earlier adherence to the common law concept of the nature of partnership property. The pertinent provisions of the Uniform Partnership Act, and those which we find to be determinative in this case are as follows:

Causes of dissolution. Dissolution is caused:

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Bluebook (online)
471 P.2d 110, 2 Wash. App. 873, 1970 Wash. App. LEXIS 1213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-shatina-washctapp-1970.