Lett v. Watts

463 So. 2d 138
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 21, 1984
Docket83-900
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 463 So. 2d 138 (Lett v. Watts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lett v. Watts, 463 So. 2d 138 (Ala. 1984).

Opinion

William Gary Watts and his wife, Sharon Lett Watts, died intestate in an automobile accident on March 6, 1983. There were no children born of their marriage, and neither had any lineal descendants.

The plaintiff, Jessie V.L. Lett, in her capacity as administratrix of the estate of Sharon Lett Watts, filed a complaint against the defendant, Ruby Jo Watts, in her capacity as administratrix of the estate of William Gary Watts, wherein she asked the court to declare that the estate of Sharon Watts was a joint owner of the numerous items of real and personal property which were in the name of Gary Watts and possessed by both Gary and Sharon Watts at the time of their deaths. The plaintiff also asked that a constructive trust be imposed on certain property claimed by the defendant. The plaintiff filed an amendment to her complaint, wherein she added a second count seeking a judgment against the defendant for work and labor done by Sharon Watts for Gary Watts from the date of their marriage on June 29, 1979, until their deaths. The defendant moved to dismiss the second count for failure to comply with the non-claim statute, § 43-2-350 (b), Ala. Code 1975. A ruling on the defendant's motion was reserved until after the trial. The case was tried before a judge who, after hearing all of the evidence, entered a judgment, including extensive findings of fact. The pertinent portions of those findings are as follows:

(1) W.T. Watts was the father of Gary Watts and, during his lifetime and until his death on August 12, 1979, operated a business known as "Watts Construction Company," which was a sole proprietorship individually owned by W.T. Watts.

(2) Immediately after the death of his father, Gary Watts took over and continued to operate the business.

(3) Watts Construction Company was a trade name under which Gary Watts did business from August 12, 1979, continuously until the date of his death.

(4) W.T. Watts's account with the Alabama Department of Industrial Relations and the subsequent account number assigned to Gary Watts d/b/a Watts Construction Company indicate that the business operated by Gary Watts was a successor business to that owned by his father, and the records of the Alabama Department of Industrial Relations further indicate that Gary Watts acquired the company as a going business from his father and that it was a sole proprietorship individually owned by Gary Watts during his lifetime.

(5) The records of the Motor Fuels Division of the Alabama Department of Revenue also indicate that the business was a sole proprietorship individually owned by Gary Watts during his lifetime.

(6) All of the work done by Gary Watts under the trade name Watts Construction Company for Alabama Power Company, hereinafter referred to as APCo, was completed pursuant to contracts entered into with APCo by Gary Watts, individually, and APCo looked to him solely for the performance of those contracts, and APCo, for its own business purposes, regarded Watts Construction Company as being a sole proprietorship individually owned by Gary Watts. All business insurance maintained by Watts Construction Company in compliance with contractual responsibilities entered into by Gary Watts with APCo was in the name of Gary Watts solely, and all *Page 140 records related to the insurance noted that the company was a sole proprietorship owned by Gary Watts.

(7) All of the reports filed with the Internal Revenue Service (I.R.S.) by APCo in connection with payments made in accordance with contracts entered into with Gary Watts, d/b/a Watts Construction Company, designated his social security number as the appropriate taxpayer payee who should report the payments to the I.R.S.

(8) Gary Watts inherited from his father the equipment and other personal property necessary to continue the operation of the company, and subsequent to the continuation of the business and from the revenues received from contractual payments by APCo, he acquired other items of equipment and personal property which were being used in the business on the date of his death, so that the equipment and other personal property being used in the business consisted of certain inherited property and also of certain property acquired by purchase, and, in some cases, by the trading in of inherited property on the newly purchased property, as well as by the trading in of subsequently acquired property.

(9) For the calendar years 1979, 1980, and 1981, Gary and Sharon Watts filed jointly with the I.R.S., with each return being duly executed by both. On each return, Gary Watts listed his occupation as "construction" and reported all of the income of Watts Construction Company for the year applicable and listed himself as the "proprietor" of Watts Construction Company and the same "employer identification number" for federal tax reporting purposes as was assigned by the I.R.S. to his father when he operated the business. On each return, Sharon Watts listed her occupation as "housewife."

(10) For calendar years 1979, 1980, and 1981, Gary and Sharon Watts filed returns with the Alabama Department of Revenue, with each return being duly executed by both. On each return, Gary Watts listed his occupation as "construction" and Sharon Watts listed her occupation as "housewife."

(11) On each of the federal returns, Gary Watts paid self-employment taxes based on his net earnings doing business as Watts Construction Company; however, on each return, Sharon Watts neither reported earnings from self-employment, nor paid any self-employment taxes for social security purposes.

(12) Sharon Watts was a cosmetologist from July 1, 1978, until 1982, as reported on an application for employment which she executed with the U.S. Postal Service and which further stated that her "reason for wanting to leave" that employment was "started college."

(13) Sharon Watts was issued a substitute teacher's certificate on December 8, 1982, which was in effect at the time of her death, and she did some substitute teaching pursuant to the certificate.

(14) On the date of her death, Sharon Watts was employed by the U.S. Postal Service as a substitute mail carrier.

(15) During the winter quarter of 1983 and until her death, Sharon Watts was enrolled as a full-time college student, pursuing a degree in elementary education.

(16) Funds held on deposit in a checking account, which were interpleaded into the court and held on deposit by the clerk, were the property of Gary Watts, d/b/a Watts Construction Company.

(17) On the date of her death, Sharon Watts owned a quilt and certain other personal property and personal effects located inside the residence owned by Gary Watts and occupied by the couple.

(18) All other property was owned by Gary Watts, individually.

The trial court then held as follows in its decree:

(1) That Watts Construction Company was a sole proprietorship individually owned by Gary Watts and is now the property of the defendant.

(2) That the quilt and other personal property and effects located inside the residence occupied by the couple and belonging *Page 141 to Sharon Watts are the property of the plaintiff.

(3) That the net proceeds from the checking account of Gary Watts, d/b/a Watts Construction Company, held on deposit by the clerk of the court, are the property of the defendant.

(4) That all other property found to belong to Gary Watts individually is the property of the defendant.

After the trial, the court granted the defendant's motion to strike the plaintiff's second count, and the plaintiff appealed. We affirm.

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Bluebook (online)
463 So. 2d 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lett-v-watts-ala-1984.