Koplin v. Kelrick

360 S.W.2d 203, 1962 Ky. LEXIS 215
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 18, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 203 (Koplin v. Kelrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koplin v. Kelrick, 360 S.W.2d 203, 1962 Ky. LEXIS 215 (Ky. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

In 1953 the appellant, Harry Koplin, assigned to the appellees, George Kelrick and other members of the Kelrick family, undivided working interests in a group of oil and gas leases in Lee County, Kentucky, [205]*205called the Cable Project. Under the terms of the assignments Koplin and one Edward Gimbel were designated as operators of the project with power to market the oil and gas produced, collect the proceeds, deduct the expenses of production and sale, and pay over to the assignees their pro rata shares of the balance.

This suit was brought by the Kelricks against Koplin in April of 19S6. It demanded recovery of $11,207.33 as their share of the net proceeds unpaid as of January 31, 1956, and an accounting. Koplin denied the indebtedness and counterclaimed for $10,000 allegedly loaned to George Kelrick on September 1, 1955. The case was tried by deposition and resulted in a judgment for the Kelricks in the full amount sought. Koplin appeals. His contentions are (1) that the judgment was based on incompetent evidence improperly admitted and (2) that he and the Kelricks were members of .a mining partnership and an action for an accounting could not be maintained prior to its dissolution. Following an elaboration of the facts of the case, we shall discuss these points in reverse order.

It appears that as between Koplin and Gimbel, Koplin was the outside man and Gimbel the bookkeeper. Gimbel, a member ■of a Chicago accounting firm, handled the money, and all went well until he died early in 1955. Up until that event the Kelricks received a total of $4,026.10 through regular payments representing tentative net income. The last checks issued by Gimbel were for the month of October, 1954, and were received in January of 1955. Thereafter, by his own admission, Koplin became the sole operator of the Cable Project, though he neither asked nor received authority from the Kelricks to act singly. Payments to the Kelricks ceased forthwith. Their repeated demands of Koplin for information were parried by the explanation that the records had been turned over to an accounting firm in Denver, which apparently was unable to straighten them out. Finally, at the insistence of the Kelricks, new division orders were executed pursuant to which further payments for oil purchased from the project were made directly by the purchaser, Ashland Oil and Refining Company, to the Kelricks, subject to a deduction of .6 of 1% in favor of Koplin for “lifting costs.” The exact date of this re-arrangement is not shown, but it was in late 1955 or early 1956 and, presumably, took effect as of February 1, 1956. From that time until all of the parties sold their interests to the Climax Molybdenum Company in December of 1956 (during the pendency of this action) the Kelricks received from Ashland, as their share of the oil produced and sold by the Cable Project, some $20,000.

During the interim between the cessation of payments by Gimbel and the commencement of payments by Ashland, Koplin received the money for the oil, though he did so under the name of Lee Oil Company. On July 5, 1955, he wrote George Kelrick, “If you want some money on account, let me know and I will advance it to you.” On. September 1, 1955, he gave Kelrick a check for $10,000, which he says was a loan and Mr. and Mrs. Kelrick say was paid on account toward what he would owe them when the books were eventually balanced.

At this point it is necessary that we explain the Lee Oil Company. According to Koplin, he did not serve as operator of the Cable JProject strictly in his own right, but in behalf of Lee Oil Company, a partnership composed of himself, another member of his family, Gimbel, and a Chicago lawyer named Dashow, all of whom owned fractional shares of the working interest. This firm, through Koplin, managed the business, including financial receipts and disbursements. The Kelricks and some 15 other co-tenants of the working interest were referred to as “outside” interest holders. The $10,000 check to George Kelrick was drawn on Koplin’s personal account rather than the funds of Lee Oil Company. Therefore, says Koplin, it could not have been on account of what Lee Oil Company owed and, even so, it should be repaid him anyway because an “audit” [206]*206of the partnership books (hereinafter mentioned more fully) showed the Kelricks to be indebted to it instead of its being indebted to them. Reserving this latter point for the moment, we think the answer to this line of argument is that the Kelricks had no agreement with the Lee Oil Company. They authorized no one hut Koplin and Gimbel to operate the project in their behalf, and whatever arrangement these two may have had with other associates was their own affair. To the Kelricks the very existence of Lee Oil Company was irrelevant except as a nom de plume under which Koplin conducted his oil ventures. Under the contract the Kelricks were entitled to look solely to Koplin and Gimbel, and after the latter’s death, to Koplin alone.

It is immaterial, of course, that the defendant was named in the complaint as “Harry Koplin, d/b/a Lee Oil Company.” The references in the caption and in the body of the complaint to Koplin’s doing business as Lee Oil Company are merely descriptive. Koplin is the only defendant, and the complaint does, not .purport either to he against a partnership or, indeed, to involve a partnership matter. It is simply a suit against an agent to require him to divulge and disgorge what he owes his principals.

This view of the case brings us full face to Koplin’s contention that the suit is by one partner against another for a premature accounting, and what we have said thus far foretells the answer. Section 8 of the contract provides as follows:

“8. The powers granted to the Operators by Paragraph 4 shall be construed so that the said Operators in acting as agent for the Assignee, shall be deemed to act for him separately, although the Operators may represent other owners of interests in the above property.”

We need not consider whether the various “outside” and “inside” (Lee Oil Company) parties were, by virtue of their undivided interests, mining partners (see, however, Appleby v. Buck, Ky.1962, 351 S.W.2d 494, 497-8), nor whether an action for an accounting brought by one partner against the other while continuing to do business will lie. As we see it, whatever else may have been the technical or legal relationship of the various interest holders, Koplin occupied also the position of agent for these particular co-tenants, and there is no sound reason why they should have been required to await the cessation of their community of interest through transfer of his or their fractional mineral shares to a third party or parties before bringing suit for an accounting.

Actually, the trial court did not require an accounting of Koplin and he did not render one. The Kelricks had about the same success' in eliciting information from him through court as they had experienced in the months following Gimbel’s death. The only new information that turned up was two sets of financial statements (loosely referred to during the proceedings as “audits”) prepared from the accounting records of the Lee Oil Company, without verification by audit, by a firm of accountants in Wichita, Kansas, hired by Koplin. One of these sets of statements purported to reflect the condition of the Cable Project and the amounts due to or from the “outside” owners as of November 30, 1956.

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Related

Barnett v. Hagans
445 S.W.2d 839 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1969)
Koplin v. Kelrick
443 S.W.2d 644 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1969)

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360 S.W.2d 203, 1962 Ky. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koplin-v-kelrick-kyctapp-1962.