Martin v. Martin

712 P.2d 820, 77 Or. App. 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 8, 1986
Docket4036, A26145
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 712 P.2d 820 (Martin v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Martin, 712 P.2d 820, 77 Or. App. 226 (Or. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

VAN HOOMISSEN, J.

This action was brought by Robert and Sharon Martin (plaintiffs) against Leroy (Sharon’s brother) and Catherine Martin (defendants) for dissolution of a partnership, declaration of rights in real property, partition of real property and an accounting. A supplemental complaint asked damages for conversion. Leroy and Catherine answered and counterclaimed against Kenneth and Elsie Martin (parents of Leroy and Sharon) and Robert and Sharon Martin, for a declaration of a partnership between all of them and for an accounting.

Defendants appeal the trial court’s holding that their interest in the profits from the “Homeplace” partnership (Homeplace) terminated at the end of the 1981 crop year. They also appeal the trial court’s division of profits in the dissolution and winding up of the “Blaylock Place and Smith Place” partnership (Blaylock/Smith). Plaintiffs cross-appeal the values assigned to the properties in the Blaylock/Smith dissolution and winding up. On de novo review, we affirm in part, reverse in part and remand on the appeal and affirm on the cross-appeal.

Kenneth and Elsie Martin (the Kenneth Martins) are the owners of the Homeplace property. Plaintiffs and defendants have engaged in a joint farming operation with the Kenneth Martins on Homeplace. The Homeplace property itself was never considered an asset of the joint operation. All of the individual parties have farmed and raised livestock on the Homeplace property without any written agreement since 1962. Income was distributed 50 percent to the Kenneth Martins, 25 percent to plaintiffs and 25 percent to defendants. Expenses have been shared in the same way. The Kenneth Martins furnished the land, about 4700 acres, and paid the taxes. Robert and Leroy did the bulk of the work. Each couple separately owned some cattle. The cows were kept together, with each couple receiving the full value of any cow sold which belonged to it. Any calves were treated as belonging to the joint farming operation, and profits were split proportionately.

In the early years, the Kenneth Martins owned all of the equipment. As new equipment was purchased, or repairs were made on old equipment, each couple was charged its [229]*229proportional share of the cost on its account. Later plaintiffs and defendants purchased equipment on a 50-50 basis. Each couple also purchased some equipment on its own.

In 1967, Robert and Leroy acquired the 635 acre Blaylock property.1 In 1971, Leroy purchased the 2200 acre Smith property, to farm with Robert. Plaintiffs and defendants consider themselves co-owners of that parcel.2 Plaintiffs and defendants jointly farmed the Blaylock/Smith properties without a written agreement and without the participation of the Kenneth Martins.

Kenneth kept an account of all the income and debts of both joint fárming operations through 1978. From 1962-1979, the parties filed partnership tax returns. After 1979, they filed individual tax returns; apparently that was done for Social Security purposes.3 Kenneth still kept accounts for all of the parties, including records for Blaylock/Smith. In 1978, he ceased his accounting because plaintiffs and defendants failed to provide him with all of the necessary records.

In the last few years, Leroy had done nearly all of the work on Smith, and Robert had done nearly all the work on Blaylock. In 1980, a dispute arose between plaintiffs and defendants. Before then, Robert harvested the crops on [230]*230Blaylock, Leroy harvested the crops on Smith, and each party had the crops delivered to a storage facility. The crop was placed in the name of the person who had delivered it, but arrangements were made for each party to be able to sell one-half of it and to collect the sale proceeds. When Leroy harvested the 1980 crop on Smith, he had it placed in his name at the storage facility and made arrangements providing that, when Robert sold his half, the check would be made payable to Leroy, who then would pay Robert whatever was due him. Leroy chose this method, because he claimed that Robert had been late making the mortgage payments on Smith and he wanted to make sure that funds were available to make the next payment on time. As a result, Robert delayed selling until he could be assured that he would get the proceeds from the sale. By the time the crop was sold, Robert claimed that the price had dropped substantially.

In October, 1980, plaintiffs sued defendants for dissolution of Blaylock/Smith, partition of those properties and an accounting. In November, 1980, defendants joined the Kenneth Martins as third-party defendants, asking for a declaration of a partnership. Plaintiffs filed a supplemental complaint for conversion against defendants regarding the 1980 crop dispute. On March 6, 1981, the Kenneth Martins notified plaintiffs and defendants that the joint farming operation of Homeplace was terminated and that they could no longer farm there. The Kenneth Martins then gave Robert permission to continue farming Homeplace. Leroy was not allowed to participate in the operation of Homeplace at any time after March, 1981, or to take part in the seeding in 1981 for the 1982 crop. However, defendants’ seed wheat and equipment in which they had an interest were used to farm Homeplace.

In a pretrial hearing, the parties recorded their understanding of a pendente lite arrangement that Robert would continue to farm Blaylock, Leroy would continue to farm Smith, all parties would arrange a schedule for the use of jointly owned equipment at all properties, including Home-place, and all parties would keep an account of their income and expenses. On September 22,1982, the trial court held that the Homeplace partnership had been dissolved as of 1981 and ordered an accounting through the end of the 1981 crop year. The court approved the accounting maintained by Kenneth [231]*231for the joint farming operation on Homeplace through 1978 and granted a judgment in favor of the Kenneth Martins and against defendants in the sum of $13,477.69, the amount shown due by the accounting.4 Insofar as Homeplace was concerned, defendants were awarded only the rental value of their interest in partnership property used to farm Homeplace after the 1981 dissolution of the partnership, and the court ordered that they be reimbursed for their share of the seed used in the 1982 crop on Homeplace.

The court also dissolved Blaylock/Smith effective immediately, awarded the Smith property to defendants and the Blaylock property to plaintiffs, adjusted their accounts for differentials in the values of and encumbrances on the two properties and ordered an accounting between them through 1982, directing that they share profits and expenses on a 50-50 basis. The court also awarded plaintiffs $1,237.20 in damages for conversion against defendants. By a supplemental judgment, the court ordered that that amount not be awarded as conversion damages, but that it be considered in the accounting as money due from defendants to plaintiffs in the Blaylock/Smith winding up. The accounting was completed, and the final decree winding up Homeplace and Blaylock/Smith was entered in August, 1984.

Defendants contend that the trial court erred in awarding them no interest in the profits of the partnership after the end of the 1981 crop year. The court found that the partnership had been dissolved as of 1981.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
712 P.2d 820, 77 Or. App. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-martin-orctapp-1986.