Leavell v. Linn

884 P.2d 1364, 1994 Wyo. LEXIS 145, 1994 WL 646474
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1994
Docket93-189, 93-190
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 884 P.2d 1364 (Leavell v. Linn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leavell v. Linn, 884 P.2d 1364, 1994 Wyo. LEXIS 145, 1994 WL 646474 (Wyo. 1994).

Opinion

McEWAN, District Judge (Retired).

On February 4, 1980, the principal parties to this action purchased ranch property from their parents. The conveyance was made to the parties as tenants in common. They also executed a Co-Ownership Agreement which provided, inter alia, that each owned a ⅜ interest in the property. 1 The agreement also provided that none of the parties to the agreement would institute an action to partition or divide the property without the written consent of all other parties. Nonetheless, Connie Leavell (nee Linn) and her husband brought an action to partition. In the first appeal, they contend the district court should have found that a partnership existed and then entertained an action to dissolve that partnership, and, hence, divide the real property among the partners despite the terms of the agreement. Connie’s brothers opposed her action and sought attorney’s fees. In the second appeal, they challenge the district court’s determination that the Leavell’s lawsuit did not constitute a breach of the co-ownership agreement, thus precluding the brothers’ claim for an award of attorney’s fees.

We affirm.

ISSUES

A brief paragraph introducing the parties is necessary. Connie Linn Leavell is sister to Bennie L. Linn, Peter V. Linn, and Eugene A. Linn (Linn brothers). Harold Lea-vell is Connie’s husband. Mary Pat Linn, Trudy Linn, and Ellen W. Linn are the spouses of the Linn brothers. Connie Lea-vell and her brothers owned a ranch in Teton County as tenants in common. The Leavells initiated this litigation, seeking to establish that the relationship between Connie Leavell and her brothers, as it related to ownership of the ranch, was a partnership. Her goal was to dissolve the partnership and/or to partition the ranch property. The Linn brothers viewed her action as a breach of the provision of the agreement they had jointly executed which waived partition of the ranch for a period of forty years. Based on that alleged breach of contract, the Linn brothers sought to recover attorney’s fees incurred in the defense of this lawsuit.

As appellants in Case No. 93-189, the Lea-vells ask that this court reverse the district court’s conclusion that no partnership was formed and remand the case to the district court for supervision of the dissolution and winding up process under the Uniform Partnership Act, Wyo.Stat. §§ 17-13-101 (1989) et seq. The Linn brothers respond that the district court did not commit reversible error in holding that no partnership existed between the eotenants of the Linn Ranch.

As appellants in Case No. 93-190, the Linn brothers state this issue: Did the district court err in failing to grant them , attorney’s fees because the Leavells initiated an action for partition even though their agreement prohibited such action. The Leavells contend they did not breach the non-partition provision of the agreement and, therefore, the Linn brothers are not entitled to recover attorney’s fees.

FACTS

Eugene B. and Lilly L. Linn, husband and wife, owned a small ranch located in Teton County. The ranch was acquired by patent in 1913, after Eugene B. Linn’s father had successfully completed the applicable homestead requirements. Over the years, parts of the ranch had been sold in order for the family to make ends meet and to acquire capital for other investments. In 1979, the children of Eugene B. and Lilly L. Linn became increasingly concerned that the family homestead would be sold, slowly but surely, until it was gone. Thus, they began devising a plan by which they could acquire the ranch from their parents, “in order to keep all or some significant portion of that land within family ownership.” The elder Linns agreed to sell the ranch to their chil *1366 dren for $237,000 and the ranch was conveyed to them on February 4, 1980, as tenants in common. The children borrowed $60,000 as a down payment and gave then-parents a promissory note and mortgage, with a term of forty years, in the amount of $177,000. The mortgage was, of course, recorded. The children did weigh the possibility of forming a partnership in order to facilitate purchase and management of the ranch but, ultimately, what each of them agreed to, and executed, on April 22, 1980, was a Co-Ownership Agreement. The $60,000 loan was repaid through the sale of a small parcel of the ranch, as well as by payments made by the children, but over the years they have barely managed to keep current on the interest due the parents on that note. The parents have never contemplated foreclosure.

The relationship between the children has deteriorated significantly as the years have passed. Part of the deterioration has been because of the inability of the siblings to reach anything resembling an agreement on what to do with the ranch. However, the heart of the controversy has been the Lea-vells’ desire to have a significant portion of the habitable part of the ranch conveyed to them as a site for their home. Mrs. Leavell had lived on the ranch for many years before she and her brothers purchased it, and she had improved a cabin on the ranch as her home. She and her husband continued to use that cabin as their home, but they wanted to improve the building and believed they needed to “own” a significant parcel surrounding the cabin in order to justify making costly improvements. 2 The group was simply unable to reach an agreement on what should be done to accommodate the Leavells’ requests. Of course, the Leavells perceive that the Linn Brothers were being unreasonable and the brothers perceived that, not only were the Leavells being unreasonable, but also that accommodation of the Leavells’ request for a homesite would have served to frustrate the future possibilities of subdividing the ranch. It is the Linn brothers’ contentions that what Mrs. Leavell really wanted all along was to have the ranch partitioned. However, the agreement Mrs. Lea-vell signed in 1980 contained this provision:

In order to effectuate the liquidation of the mortgages to which the Property is currently subject, each Party, for himself and his heirs and assigns, covenants and agrees that he will not institute or cause to be instituted any partition or division of the Property without the written consent of all other Parties or their heirs or assigns for a period of forty (40) years. This restriction against partition during the period aforesaid does not deprive any Party of his right to convey or transfer his interest in the Property to any other person or entity. 3

The agreement also provided a detailed procedure whereby any of the parties could sell their interest in the ranch, whether that sale is to a third party or to a member of the family 4 . The significance of this provision is that the Leavells could have left the family arrangement at any time. Of course, the record bears out quite clearly that the ranch was worth more (at least to outsiders) as a single parcel than it was in the form of ownership opted for by Mrs. Leavell and the Linn brothers.

DISCUSSION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
884 P.2d 1364, 1994 Wyo. LEXIS 145, 1994 WL 646474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leavell-v-linn-wyo-1994.