Kistler v. Gingles

88 F. Supp. 9, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4113
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1950
DocketCiv. No. 729
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 F. Supp. 9 (Kistler v. Gingles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kistler v. Gingles, 88 F. Supp. 9, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4113 (W.D. Ark. 1950).

Opinion

JOHN E. MILLER, District Judge.

The history of this litigation may be briefly summarized as follows.

Complaint was filed August 7, 1947, by plaintiffs, Ralph P. Kistler, R. P. Kistler, Daisy M. Kistler and R. P. Kistler, Jr., doing business as R. P. Kistler and Sons, against defendant H. F. McMahon individually and defendants H. F. McMahon, H. J. Gingles and H. W. Anderson, partners, doing business under*the name of Rock Island Coal Company, to recover from each of them the unpaid rentals in the sum of $12,500.00, with interest thereon from April 23, 1947, and $2,604.16, with interest from July 7, 1947, at 6%, under a certain coal mining lease, and the sum of $5,000.00 as damages for the failure of defendants to return the mine in a workable condition.

On November 20, 1947, defendants, Gingles and Anderson, filed their answer which was in effect a general denial. By amended answer filed December 18, 1947, defendants, Gingles and Anderson, asserted as a complete defense that there at no time existed a general partnership between the defendants but that it was in fact a limited partnership, duly organized under the Limited Partnership Act of Arkansas, and by virtue thereof they were liable only to the extent of their original contribution and were not liable to these plaintiffs. By amendment to amended answer filed January 24, 1948, defendants, Gingles and Anderson, asserted that plaintiffs had waived any right to hold [11]*11defendants Hable as general partners, and by plaintiffs’ acts the latter were estopped to claim that defendants were liable as general partners. The cause was tried to the court on February 25, 26 and 27, 1948. At that time counsel for the plaintiffs waived their second cause of action set forth in the complaint (the claim for $5,000.00 damages to the mine). At the conclusion of that trial the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, separately stated. Judgment was entered based thereon holding that defendants, Gingles and Anderson, were not liable to the plaintiffs as general partners, having substantially complied with the Arkansas law pertaining to the formation of limited partnerships, and the complaint of plaintiffs was dismissed as to those defendants. Judgment was rendered against defendant H. F. McMahon for the total sum of $15,854.53 and costs.

The court at that time did not pass specifically on defendants’ defense of waiver and estoppel, but did make the following findings of fact that pertain thereto. Finding of Fact No. 17 reads as follows: “The plaintiff, R. P. Kistler, had actual notice of the existence of the limited partnership and was sent by the partnership to Washington, D. C., in early January, 1946, for the purpose of obtaining the approval of the application of the partnership for a loan from the Smaller War Plants Corporation as a limited partnership. At the time the plaintiff Kistler was sent to Washington, D. C., he knew that the Smaller War Plants Corporation had required as a condition of making the loan that all of the defendants be bound jointly and severally, and further knew that the said corporation was requiring some additional action relative to the original lease that Kistler had obtained from the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians. As one of the results of the trip by the plaintiff, R. P. Kistler, to Washington, D. C., an amended application for a loan of $60,000.00 was approved without requiring the signatures of the defendants Gingles and Anderson, but notwithstanding the waiver of such requirement the loan was not consummated. In all dealings of the plaintiff R. P. Kistler with the Rock Island Coal Co., the defendants, Gingles and Anderson, never at any time represented: that they were general partners or that their liability was other than as outlined in the partnership agreement.”

Finding of Fact No. 18 reads:

“Defendants, H. J. Gingles and H. W. Anderson, did not, for themselves, or either of them, by word spoken or written, or by conduct, represent either as a general partner to anyone, nor consented to any other person representing either to anyone, as such general partner, in an existing general partnership.

“Plaintiffs did not give credit or sustain injury on the faith of any representation that the defendants, or either of them, were general partners.”

The plaintiff appealed and the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held: “They (Gingles and Anderson) simply' did not comply with the statute and the conclusion that they had substantially complied was erroneous. It may not be sustained.” Kistler et al. v. Gingles et al., 171 F.2d 912, 915.

The judgment as to defendants, Gingles and Anderson, was reversed and the case remanded.

It was urged before the Court of Appeals that the court could affirm on the waiver and estoppel contention even though this court did not pass specifically thereon, but in refusing to so do, the Court of Appeals stated, 171 F.2d at page 915:

“It is contended for appellees however that even if the judgment may not be sustained on the ground upon which the trial court rendered it, it should nevertheless be affirmed on the ground that the evidence and the findings of the trial court supported by evidence established that Kistler had with full knowledge waived any right to assert and was estopped to assert against Gingles and Anderson the claim that they were general partners of Rock Island Coal Company or liable as such for the unpaid! rent.

“We do not doubt the power of this court to refuse to reverse a judgment of the trial court which settles the rights of the parties according to law, notwithstand[12]*12ing the trial court may have assigned erroneous reasons for the judgment. But we are not persuaded that this case presents appropriate occasion for the exercise of that power. It is clear that plaintiffs’ partnership throughout the transactions involved was represented by and acted through Ralph P. Kistler, and his knowledge of Rock Island Coal Company and the relations of Gingles and Anderson to it, as well as his transactions with it and with them, were imputable to the plaintiffs, but there are no sufficient findings of fact by the trial court to present the issues of waiver or estoppel for decision here as matter of law, and in respect to those issues we are left to infer the facts from the voluminous record.”

The appellate court set forth in its opinion the provisions of the Limited Partnership Act, Ark.Stats. (1947) Sec. 65-209, relied upon by plaintiffs for recovery, “ * $ * and jf any false statement be made in such certificate or affidavit, all the persons interested in such partnership shall be liable for all the engagements thereof, as general partners”, and made the following comment in regard thereto: “That section, it appears, has not been considered by the Supreme Court of Arkansas in relation to issues of waiver or estoppel, so that to determine such issues here this court would be required to make original declaration both of the law of Arkansas which controls on these issues in the case, and also original findings of the facts to be inferred from the evidence. That is beyond the function of the appellate court in the situation presented.”

After the case was remanded, the attorneys for the parties entered into the following stipulation, filed October 12, 1949:

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Bluebook (online)
88 F. Supp. 9, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kistler-v-gingles-arwd-1950.