Laddon v. Whittlesey

408 A.2d 93, 44 Md. App. 19, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 412
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 6, 1979
Docket56, September Term, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 408 A.2d 93 (Laddon v. Whittlesey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laddon v. Whittlesey, 408 A.2d 93, 44 Md. App. 19, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 412 (Md. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

—prologue—

The Uniform Partnership Act, Md. Code, Corps. & Assocs. Art., Title 9, like most uniform acts, was intended to anticipate problems and simplify solutions within defined areas. Subtitle 6 anticipated the problems of Dissolution and Winding Up of partnerships. Section 9-609 anticipated the problems of applying partnership property upon dissolution in either instance when a surviving partner desires to continue the business with the same name or when the business is both dissolved and terminated.

If dissolution is mutually agreed upon, each partner may have the partnership property applied to discharge its liabilities and the surplus applied to pay in cash the net amount owing each partner. § 9-609 (a). If the dissolution is not mutual and amicably agreed upon; but caused by the wrongful conduct of a partner, the innocent partner is entitled not only to his net share of the surplus after liabilities, but also to damages caused by the wrongdoer. § 9-609 (b).

The innocent partners are given a conditional option either to continue the business or to wind it up and terminate it. If they desire to continue the business in the same name, they must, among other things, pay the partner who wrongfully causes the dissolution the value of his interest in the partnership (§ 9-609 (b) (2)), as of the date of dissolution (§ 9-614), less damages recoverable as abovementioned (§ 9-609 (b) (1) (ii)). If the business is not continued, the innocent partner has the right to wind up the partnership affairs, § 9-608; nonetheless, the partner who caused the dissolution wrongfully is entitled to be paid in cash the net amount of the surplus after repayment of liabilities as any other partner pursuant to § 9-609 (a), although his share is *21 subject to diminution for whatever damages were caused by his wrongful breach of the partnership agreement causing dissolution, § 9-609 (b) (3) (i).

While all partnership rights to an accounting of any partner’s interest, investment or wrongful cause, accrue at the date of dissolution, § 9-614 and see § 9-609 (b) (2), dissolution does not terminate the partnership. The partnership continues until winding up of partnership affairs is completed, § 9-601. Only in the best of all possible partnership worlds will dissolution and termination coincide, but more often than is desirable a partnership will begin to disintegrate commensurate with a developing animosity between partners. At some point during that period, dissolution may be caused intentionally or unconsciously by wrongful conduct of a recalcitrant partner, but the “partnership” business limps on. The partners now openly antagonistic may be unable to agree on anything, including whether to carry on or dissolve; whether to wind up completely or have some partners remain and continue the business; or when and how to accomplish any of this.

When partnership affairs reach this stage, statutes do not provide easy answers, and even though the Uniform Act tries to anticipate such exigencies, the court is left with the responsibility to decree a dissolution as the solution. By the time the partners are resolved to seek court dissolution as a last resort, much damage has been done, and more may occur before termination because the date the court determines dissolution occurred and the final termination may affect distribution pursuant to § 9-611. Perhaps, recognizing that there will be times when this arms length period between partners will require business to be conducted for the preservation of the business partnership assets, the Act has provided among its delineation of rights and duties of partners in § 9-401 that:

"(2) The partnership must indemnify every partner in respect of payments made and personal liabilities reasonably incurred by him in the ordinary and proper conduct of its business, or for the preservation of its business or property.”

*22 In addition thereto,

“(3) [a] partner, who in aid of the partnership makes any payment or advance beyond the amount of capital which he agreed to contribute, shall be paid interest from the date of the payment or advance.”

Unless there is some agreement for salary for specified services among or between the partners,

“(6) [n]o partner is entitled to a remuneration for acting in the partnership business, except that a surviving partner is entitled to reasonable compensation for his services in winding up the partnership affairs.”

—facts—

• When these pertinent sections of the Act are excised, dissolution of a partnership seems formulized. But when issues are isolated in a dissolution case that has dragged on for four years, replete with the digressions of individuals’ internal infighting, the panoramic partnership perspective may be distorted; the partnership purpose of dissolution digressed from; and the statutory formula misapplied. Such is the case of Laddon and Whittlesey, trading as Woodbine Auto Wreckers and Junk Company.

The case at bar, from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, unfolded in serial-like sequences when appellant Samuel E. Laddon and appellee Robert F. Whittlesey found that their relationship as partners in the junk business was foundering. The two had purchased this business for $75,000, of which the seller took back a $50,000 deed of trust. The parties then borrowed $50,000 from a bank to be used as capital. These indebtednesses, which were to be repaid in equal periodic payments by the partners, are at the crux of this appeal, although the judge and the parties seem to have lost sight of that fact.

The origin, brief life, and ultimate demise of this partnership must be searched for in pleadings, statements and testimony from hearings on various motions made to *23 compel payment of partnership obligations, extracts of transcripts of unexplained proceedings, stipulations and agreements of the parties before a master-auditor and his reports, hearings on motions to compel a sale, requests for contribution, etc. Even the briefs were of little help in this regard because the parties elected to address the issues narrowly in isolation rather than view the whole picture. We will not respond in that manner because to do so tends to lead to the same error as that committed by the court below.

The primary problem appears to be that the trial judge tried to decide the dollar dispute between the parties without determining the fate of the business. He addressed the personal dispute between the parties rather than the dissolution of the partnership. Although he did determine dissolution had occurred on one date, his accounting appears to have envisioned a date over a year later.

—the partnership—

It is accepted that the partnership agreement originally comprehended equal contributions and equal rewards. Laddon testified that there were definite terms agreed upon, however, as to the respective duties of the partners. It was Whittlesey who detailed them in some degree. Whittlesey was to be at the job, “when [he] could”, one half day a weék — presumably without salary. Laddon, however, was to assume a far greater management role for which he would be salaried, although even his time was flexible:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
408 A.2d 93, 44 Md. App. 19, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laddon-v-whittlesey-mdctspecapp-1979.