Lytle v. Kroenke

154 P.2d 919, 67 Cal. App. 2d 596, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1184
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 18, 1945
DocketCiv. 3289
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 919 (Lytle v. Kroenke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lytle v. Kroenke, 154 P.2d 919, 67 Cal. App. 2d 596, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1184 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment striking a balance of accounts between plaintiff and defendants and awarding plaintiff judgment for the amounts to become due him.

Plaintiff was a general contractor duly licensed in California. Defendants were husband and wife and had been engaged in the business of erecting houses for sale in San Bernardino and elsewhere. They owned, or acquired, as joint tenants, lots in Orange and Los Angeles Counties upon which they proposed to continue that business.

Plaintiff and Mr. Kroenke first met in the fall of 1941. At that time plaintiff was doing business as a cement contractor. He learned that Mr. Kroenke proposed to build a number of houses in Santa Ana and saw him at his home in Los Angeles in an endeavor to secure the contract for the cement work. According to plaintiff, Kroenke proposed that they enter into a partnership for the purpose of erecting houses for sale, dividing the net profits equally.

Kroenke was completing a number of houses in Santa Ana and employed plaintiff to finish the cement work which had been abandoned by the original subcontractor. The two men *598 had various conversations concerning the proposed partnership which, according to plaintiff, resulted in an oral agreement between them. According to its terms Kroenke was to obtain the lots on which to build, together with the building loans, attend to the necessary financing, obtain the building permits, contract for the materials, let the subcontracts, keep the accounts, pay the majority of the bills and supervise the selling. Plaintiff was to furnish tools, his truck and machín-. ery, supervise construction and work on the jobs. The net profits were to be divided equally. This was modified by a later agreement whereby plaintiff was to receive one-third of the net profits from building operations in Los Angeles County.

Defendants owned five lots in or near Hawthorne in Los Angeles County which were valued at $150 each. To keep the workmen in the employ of plaintiff busy it was decided to build on these lots. Construction started about February 20, 1942, plaintiff and Kroenke each performing the respective duties imposed by their agreement.

The building permits were issued in the names of Kroenke as owner, and Fred A. Chapin as contractor. Plaintiff questioned this use of Chapin’s name as contractor as soon as he learned of it. He was told by Kroenke that Chapin was the owner of lumber yards and a licensed contractor with good financial rating; that he could secure more liberal loans from corporations financing the work by the use of the name of a contractor such as Chapin. This seemed to satisfy plaintiff who made no further complaint concerning the form of the future building permits.

Chapin testified that he received $25 on each house built; that he visited the scenes of construction a few times; that he paid the unemployment insurance and social security on payrolls furnished by Kroenke who advanced the charges at the time he submitted the payrolls.

By mutual consent plaintiff was given a drawing account of about $30 a week to pay his living expenses. A bank account was opened on which both plaintiff and Kroenke could draw checks. This account had an average balance of about $300 and only the smaller bills were paid from it. The larger bills were paid by Kroenke by checks drawn on another account.

Kroenke purchased thirteen lots in Corona del Mar in the city of Newport Beach in Orange County at the average cost *599 of $200 each. Before the Hawthorne houses were entirely completed construction was started at Corona del Mar and nine houses were completed there before August 1, 1942. Because of the difficulty in obtaining priorities no further building was undertaken and plaintiff testified that the partnership was discontinued by mutual consent.

All of the houses in both locations were sold at a profit and sometime in August, 1942, plaintiff requested an accounting. He described his conversation in San Bernardino with Kroenke on about August 8, 1942, as follows:

“I asked Kroenke in what shape the papers were in regard to our Hawthorne job and he said, ‘Why?’ I said, ‘It must be settled by now and I have some paper coming. If we can get an accounting I can go back to work and get into defense work or something.’ He said, ‘You don’t have any money coming.’ I thought he was joking. I said, ‘What do you mean, Mr. Kroenke, I don’t have any money coming?’ He said, ‘Howard, you know the only money you were supposed to get was what you could save between the cost of the houses and the loans, if you could build the houses cheaper than what the loans was you would get the difference.’ I still thought he was joking. I said, ‘Kroenke, you don’t mean that, you know better, you know me better than that. You couldn’t expect me, knowing what I do about building to enter into such a contract. It would be ridiculous, and considering that you knew about the building I had done before in my own right, you know such an idea was not only not ever spoken of, but impossible.’ We discussed it for about half an hour. He said, ‘Well, Howard, if you feel that way about it, I guess you are right and we will settle up the way you say. ’ He said it would take him probably a week to get the books up to date and he would let me know and share the profits with me on the sale of the houses.”

There is some corroboration of this in the testimony of another witness concerning a later conference between plaintiff and Kroenke relating to an accounting in which the following appears: ‘‘He (plaintiff) said, ‘You told me in San Bernardino you would settle up as we originally said.’ He (Kroenke) said, ‘I have changed my mind on that, you can sue me if you want to. ’ ”

As Kroenke' had repudiated the partnership agreement plaintiff brought this action naming Kroenke as the sole de *600 fendant. Kroenke’s deposition was taken and it then appeared that Mrs. Kroenke was his partner in all business transactions including all building operations. An amended complaint was filed joining her as a defendant.

Kroenke testified during the trial that he was fully authorized to represent his wife in all business transactions; that she knew of the building operations here involved. She signed deeds of trust on the fourteen lots to secure money with which to finance building the houses. Title to the lots was taken in the names of both defendants as joint tenants.

Kroenke flatly denied the testimony of plaintiff as to the formation of the partnership and the proposed division of the profits. He further testified that the compensation promised plaintiff for the use of his truck, cement mixer, tools, and for his labor and services was the saving, if any, between the amount loaned by the building and loan association and the cost of the completed house. He also testified there was no such saving as the cost of the house, lot and incidental expenses in each instance exceeded the amount of the loan.

The trial court found all facts in favor of plaintiff and gave him judgment for one-third of the net profits from the Hawthorne houses, and one-half of the net profits from the Corona del Mar houses, to be paid when those profits accrue.

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Related

McNichols v. Nelson Valley Building Co.
253 P.2d 744 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
Fisher v. Fisher
188 P.2d 802 (California Court of Appeal, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 919, 67 Cal. App. 2d 596, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-kroenke-calctapp-1945.