Kyser v. Hiebert

385 P.2d 90, 142 Mont. 466, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 113
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1963
Docket10485
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 385 P.2d 90 (Kyser v. Hiebert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kyser v. Hiebert, 385 P.2d 90, 142 Mont. 466, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 113 (Mo. 1963).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court in favor of the plaintiff, Leo Kyser, in an action for an accounting. The defendants below comprise a partnership and will be referred to in this opinion as the appellant, as will the defendant, Harold L. Hiebert, who represented the partnership in all transactions pertinent to this controversy and at the trial.

The material facts are as follows: On July 8, 1953, the appellant and respondent, both general contractors, executed a written agreement providing for the financing, supervision *468 and performance of two named contracts “and any other project that may be jointly agreed upon.” Under the agreement, the appellant was to provide the necessary financing while the respondent would be responsible for supervision and performance of the work, with profits to be shared equally. One of the contracts named in the agreement was, at the time, in the bidding stage and was never obtained. The other, calling for the movement from Hungry Horse, Montana, of two houses to Libby and one house to Troy, Montana, had already been concluded in the name of the respondent. In addition to this project, the appellant and respondent, pursuant to the above agreement, jointly undertook three other projects of varying degrees of magnitude. Two involved the remodeling of existing buildings and one consisted of the laying of a concrete slab for a transformer station. The performance of these contracts occupied a period of approximately five months, from July to December 1953.

At the time of the above-mentioned agreement, the respondent was in poor financial condition and during the succeeding months he and the appellant discussed, between themselves and with others, possible remedial measures. These discussions culminated in a document dated October 10, 1953, which provided in part:

“The following temporary memorandum of agreement is hereby executed by the undersigned for the purpose of declaring their intent in connection with a working agreement that the parties are planning to enter into in more detail in the near future and as soon as it is possible to find the time to execute such detailed agreement.
ft # # # * & #
“The Undersigned Leo Kyser is hereby to transfer to Harold L. Hiebert his machinery, equipment and other personal property and in payment thereof the said Harold L. Hiebert, for the Hiebert Contracting Co., a partnership will pay a sum agreeable to the parties, but will apply the same on outstand *469 ing bills of Leo Kyser. The said Leo Kyser further authorizes and directs all persons owing him and Harold L. Hiebert in any joint venture to pay the said Harold L. Hiebert therefor and the said Harold L. Hiebert agrees to apply the same on the outstanding bills owed by Leo Kyser.
“Leo Kyser also agrees to work for the said Hiebert Contracting Company for which services he will be paid the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) a week together with 25% of the profits from such business.” (For clarity, we observe that this provision did not pertain to the four joint venturés in contention.) The more detailed agreement promised in paragraph one of the above-quoted writing was never executed. The relationship of employee-employer lasted until the latter part of 1954.

The action which gave rise to the instant appeal was commenced by the respondent in 1958 after unsuccessful efforts by the parties to resolve their differences on an informal basis. In that action, the respondent sought an accounting, based upon allegations that the value of the equipment and money transferred to the appellant under the agreement of October 10, 1953, plus the respondent’s share of the profits from the four joint ventures, exceeded the amounts due respondent’s creditors; and that the appellant has failed to fully comply with his obligation to disburse these sums to the respondent’s creditors and remit the excess to the respondent. Following commencement of the action, the parties attempted, without success, to resolve their dispute through voluntary submission to arbitration.

There followed a lengthy trial at which the testimony of numerous witnesses and much documentary evidence was considered by the lower court. The trial was conducted within the framework of a stipulation by the parties as to the gross profit of the four joint ventures, the total amount of money transferred by the respondent to the appellant pursuant to the agreement of October 10, 1953, the total amount of money *470 disbursed by the appellant to the respondent’s creditors, and the total of some, but not all, categories of expense chargeable to the joint ventures. The factual issues remaining were: (1) The amount and value of the equipment transferred to the appellant by the respondent pursuant to the agreement of October 10, 1953, and (2) The amount of certain categories of expense chargeable to the joint ventures which were not included in the stipulation.

At the conclusion of the trial, and of a supplementary hearing devoted exclusively to the question of the value of the equipment transferred by the respondent to the appellant, the court found the appellant indebted to the respondent in the sum of $7,667.34 and entered judgment accordingly. From that judgment the instant appeal was taken.

In essence, the appellant’s various assignments of error challenge the correctness of the trial court’s evaluation of the evidence presented to it. The instant action is an equity case, Steiner v. McMillan, 59 Mont. 30, 195 P. 836 (1921), and while this court is consequently required to review and determine all questions of fact arising upon the evidence, E.C.M. 1947, § 93-216, the judgment of the lower court comes to this court clothed with a presumption of correctness. Bouma v. Bynum Irrigation District, 139 Mont. 360, 364 P.2d 47 (1961). In equity eases, this court “will not disturb the trial court’s findings where there is substantial evidence to support them, and we cannot overturn findings unless there is a decided preponderance of the evidence against them.” Favero v. Wynacht, 140 Mont.358 at p. 377, 371 P. 2d 858 at p. 868 (1962). As long as the decision of the lower court is supported by substantial evidence, this court will not overturn the decision even though the evidence is conflicting and would support findings in favor of the party to the controversy who did not prevail in the lower court. Bouma v. Bynum Irrigation District, supra. It is noted that the judgment of the court below is accompanied by findings of fact only with respect to the *471 question of the value of the equipment transferred by the respondent to the appellant; findings of fact respecting the other factual issues inherent in the controversy were expressly waived by the parties. In such a case, this court will imply the existence of all findings necessary to support the judgment, provided, of course, that such implied findings are warranted by the evidence. Steiner v. McMillan, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
385 P.2d 90, 142 Mont. 466, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyser-v-hiebert-mont-1963.