Mandrell v. McBee

892 S.W.2d 842, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 535
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 21, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 892 S.W.2d 842 (Mandrell v. McBee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandrell v. McBee, 892 S.W.2d 842, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 535 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

KOCH, Judge.

This appeal involves a dispute concerning the misappropriation of the funds of a partnership formed to construct an office building in Murfreesboro. Several of the partners filed suit in the Chancery Court for Rutherford County against other partners seeking to recover the misappropriated funds, to dissolve the partnership, and to obtain an accounting of the partnership assets. The trial court, sitting without a jury, found that two of the defendant partners had misappropriated partnership assets and awarded a $40,000 judgment against one of them. The trial court also ordered the dissolution of the partnership and an accounting of its assets. The trial court certified its order as final pursuant to Tenn.R.Civ.P. 54.02, and two of the plaintiff partners perfected this appeal challenging the amount of the judgment. While we concur with the finding that the defendant partners misappropriated partnership funds, we have determined that the amount of the judgment is not supported by the proof. Therefore, we remand the case with directions that the damage award be increased to $91,176.03.

I.

Wendell O. Mandrell and Patrick T. Vaden decided to build a new office building in downtown Murfreesboro after their residential mortgage origination business outgrew its leased quarters. Mr. Mandrell shared his plans with a business acquaintance named Marshall Preston Sweeney. Mr. Sweeney and his associate, William Curry Peacock, decided to become partners in the project because they were also looking for new offices.

Mr. Mandrell retained an architect to design the building in the early summer of 1986. Mr. Sweeney suggested that the partnership employ William T. McBee as the general contractor for the project. Mr. Mandrell and Mr. Vaden did not know Mr. McBee, but Mr. Sweeney and Mr. Peacock had worked with him on other projects. Mr. Sweeney shared the preliminary design for the building with Mr. McBee, and in August 1986, Mr. McBee estimated that the building would cost $398,980 to build. Mr. McBee offered to construct the building at cost in return for a twenty percent interest in the partnership. The others accepted Mr. McBee’s proposal and agreed that each of the five partners would own twenty percent of the partnership.

The partners did not prepare a formal partnership agreement but agreed on a $570,980 budget for the project.1 Mr. Swee[844]*844ney arranged for a $575,000 construction loan from First City Bank where he served as a director and a member of the loan committee. The partners did not arrange for any formal controls for drawing down the construction funds; Messrs. Mandrell, Vaden, and Peacock basically left the financial arrangements to Mr. Sweeney and the construction of the building to Mr. McBee.

The partners closed the $575,000 loan on November 20, 1986 and immediately authorized drawing approximately $130,000 to purchase the property on which the building would be built. Mr. McBee later altered the building’s plans to make it cheaper to build. Between February 10 and May 22, 1987, either Mr. Sweeney or Mr. McBee made eight draws totalling $575,000. All the loan funds were deposited in a personal checking account that Mr. McBee had opened at First City Bank in January 1987.

Messrs. Mandrell, Vaden, and Peacock did not learn that the loan proceeds had been exhausted until late May 1987. The news concerned them because the building was not complete and several subcontractors and material suppliers were insisting that they had not been paid. Messrs. Mandrell, Vaden, Sweeney, and Peacock moved into their new offices over the Memorial Day weekend even though the building was not completed. After they were unable to convince Mr. McBee to return to finish the construction, they were forced to borrow an additional $35,000 to complete the project.

Messrs. Mandrell, Vaden, Peacock, and Sweeney and their wives filed suit against Mr. McBee and his wife in January 1988, alleging that Mr. McBee had misrepresented the construction costs and that he had misappropriated a portion of the construction loan proceeds. After Mr. McBee revealed during discovery that he and Mr. Sweeney had agreed to use part of the loan proceeds to pay off other unrelated business debts, Messrs. Mandrell, Vaden, and Peacock moved to amend their complaint to allege that Mr. Sweeney and his wife had also misappropriated a portion of the loan proceeds.2

In August 1990, the Circuit Court for Lincoln County convicted Mr. McBee of conspiracy to commit armed robbery. In November 1990, Mr. McBee pled guilty in the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee to mail fraud and owning an illegal gambling business. On December 18, 1990, the trial court entered an order granting Messrs. Mandrell, Vaden, Peacock, and Sweeney a $264,950 default judgment against Mr. McBee.

The trial court heard the evidence against Mr. Sweeney without a jury in February 1991 and in August 1992 filed a memorandum opinion finding that Messrs. Sweeney and McBee had conspired to pay themselves $20,-000 each from the construction loan and that they were jointly and severally liable to the partnership for the $40,000 they diverted. Accordingly, the trial court awarded Messrs. Mandrell and Vaden a $40,000 judgment against Mr. Sweeney and denied Mr. Sweeney’s post-trial motion to reduce the judgment to $20,000. Messrs. Mandrell and Va-den have perfected this appeal.

II.

The remaining protagonists on this appeal are Messrs. Mandrell and Vaden on the one hand and Mr. Sweeney on the other. We take up first Messrs. Mandrell and Vaden’s assertion that they are entitled to more than $40,000 judgment against Mr. Sweeney because they proved that Messrs. Sweeney and McBee misappropriated more than $40,000 in partnership funds.

All partners have an equal right to use and possess partnership property for partnership purposes. Tenn.Code Ann. § 61-l-124(a), -124(b)(1) (1989). They do not have a separate possessory interest in [845]*845partnership property, and they do not have the right to use partnership property for their own purposes without the consent of the other partners. Omnicon, Inc. v. King, 688 S.W.2d 818, 819 (Tenn.1985); Putnam v. Shoaf, 620 S.W.2d 510, 514 (Tenn.Ct.App.1981). When partners use partnership property for their own purposes, they must account to the partnership for the benefits they receive and must hold any profits derived by them as the partnership’s trustees. Tenn. Code Ann. § 61-l-120(a) (1989).

Partnership property includes “all property originally brought into the partnership stock or subsequently acquired, by purchase or otherwise, on account of the partnership.” Tenn.Code Ann. § 61-l-107(a) (1989). Since it was the partnership that borrowed the $575,000 from First City Bank, the proceeds of the construction loan were partnership property.

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Bluebook (online)
892 S.W.2d 842, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandrell-v-mcbee-tennctapp-1994.