McCaughey v. Murphy

485 S.E.2d 511, 225 Ga. App. 874, 97 Fulton County D. Rep. 1260, 1997 Ga. App. LEXIS 523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 6, 1997
DocketA95A0915, A95A0916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 485 S.E.2d 511 (McCaughey v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaughey v. Murphy, 485 S.E.2d 511, 225 Ga. App. 874, 97 Fulton County D. Rep. 1260, 1997 Ga. App. LEXIS 523 (Ga. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Johnson, Judge.

Joseph M. Murphy and Thomas K. McCaughey, two New York residents, formed Boxwood Associates (“Boxwood”), a Georgia limited partnership, in order to acquire, rehabilitate and operate the historic Lamar Building in Augusta, Georgia. After the venture failed, Murphy and McCaughey disputed who was responsible for certain debts. Murphy sued McCaughey to recover funds Murphy allegedly expended to fulfill partnership obligations which Murphy claimed that McCaughey, as general partner, had obligated McCaughey and the partnership to pay. Murphy’s lawsuit, as amended, sought damages totaling millions of dollars and asked for an accounting pursuant to OCGA § 14-8-22. McCaughey countercláimed against Murphy. The trial court then appointed an auditor to investigate all of the facts raised by the pleadings and the evidence and to make a report to the court pursuant to OCGA § 9-7-8.

The court-appointed auditor filed four separate reports and reviewed hundreds of pages of documents. The auditor ultimately determined that only Murphy was entitled to relief. He concluded that McCaughey was indebted to Murphy for 20 percent of the operating costs Murphy incurred after 1986. The auditor also determined that McCaughey was unjustly enriched at Murphy’s expense.

The record discloses the following. From Boxwood’s inception in late 1983 until October 7, 1987, McCaughey was the sole general partner, and Murphy and McCaughey were the only limited partners. During that time, McCaughey owned a fraction greater than a 50 percent interest in Boxwood, and Murphy owned the balance. On *875 October 7, 1987, Murphy also became a general partner.

From the beginning, McCaughey and Murphy intended to finance the project with tax-exempt industrial revenue bonds and not their own funds. The first bonds were issued in December 1983 for $5.4 million. Bank of America required personal guarantees by both Murphy and McCaughey before it would release the bond proceeds.

• By mid-1986, the project was experiencing severe financial problems. In July 1986, James Troutman, the project manager, projected a $3.35 million shortfall in funds available for the renovation. According to McCaughey’s testimony, at this point he advised Murphy he would not be responsible for any future funding of the project and wanted out of the partnership. McCaughey asserted the reason that he remained as a partner, however, was to assist with another tax-exempt bond issue to meet the projected shortfall.

It is undisputed that McCaughey did not comply with the partnership provisions for resignation and withdrawal. Notwithstanding McCaughey’s claim that he remained as general partner to benefit Boxwood, the auditor determined that McCaughey remained as general partner in order to avail himself of approximately $200,000 in personal tax savings. Despite McCaughey’s purported reluctance to continue with the project, he remained Boxwood’s sole general partner incurring further obligations on its behalf. McCaughey continued to represent Boxwood and bound the partnership and himself and Murphy to complete the renovation even if funds from the bond proceeds were insufficient.

In December 1986, through Citibank, an additional $3.6 million in tax-exempt bonds were issued to finance the completion of the project. The repayment of these bonds was guaranteed by a Citibank letter of credit, which in turn was guaranteed by Murphy, McCaughey, and Wayside Associates, a New York limited partnership. Citibank required personal guarantees from McCaughey and Murphy. Both jointly and severally guaranteed any indebtedness to Citibank and guaranteed Boxwood’s obligations including the provision in the loan agreement requiring the project’s completion. The Citibank letter of credit was secured by collateral pledged by Murphy and McCaughey.

As Boxwood floundered, Murphy infused additional funds which went largely unmatched by McCaughey. In May 1987, Drexel, Burn-ham, Lambert Realty, Inc. (“DBLR”), a management company owned and controlled by Murphy, began funding the operation rather than Boxwood drawing down additional proceeds from the second bond issue. From January 1988 through June 1988, DBLR made advances to operate Boxwood. McCaughey claims DBLR did so without his permission. The auditor traced advances totaling $2,361,799 directly and indirectly to Murphy.

*876 On April 21, 1988, Bank of America extended the letter of credit on the original $5.4 million bond issue with Murphy as the sole guarantor. After McCaughey refused to agree to renew as a guarantor, Bank of America consented to his release. The renovation and operation of the building proved unsuccessful. After the project collapsed, Boxwood defaulted on its obligations to the bond holders, and thus, to Bank of America and Citibank. Bank of America foreclosed on the Lamar Building in 1989 and reached a settlement with Murphy. Bank of America released Murphy from all liability except for one-half of any funds he recovered from McCaughey in his lawsuit and payment of $100,000. Citibank foreclosed on all assets held as security under its letter of credit, the $125,000 placed as security by McCaughey and about $1,100,000 of Murphy’s personal assets.

In his final report, the auditor determined that McCaughey owed Murphy more than half a million dollars. The trial court adopted the auditor’s findings then entered judgment against McCaughey, awarding Murphy $632,334. McCaughey directly appealed from the trial court’s judgment, and Murphy cross-appealed.

This Court dismissed McCaughey’s appeal and Murphy’s cross-appeal for failure to follow discretionary procedures. The Supreme Court reversed after it decided that the auditor’s report contained only factual findings thus making the judgment of the superior court directly appealable. McCaughey v. Murphy, 267 Ga. 64 (473 SE2d 762) (1996). We therefore reinstate both appeals for consideration on their merits. Held:

1. Dismissal orders previously entered are hereby vacated in both Case Nos. A95A0915 and A95A0916.

Case No. A95A0915

2. McCaughey’s sole enumeration of error is that the trial court erred in accepting the auditor’s report and entering judgment against him. McCaughey contends that the theories of liability stated by the auditor are contrary to the pleadings, not supported by any facts, and are invalid as a matter of law.

The threshold question is whether an auditor seeking to allocate responsibility between two partners is free to disregard the partnership agreement and award damages based on a percentage of ownership not provided by the partnership agreement. From Boxwood’s inception until October 7, 1987, McCaughey was the sole general partner and owned more than 50 percent of the partnership. The partnership documents required McCaughey and Murphy’s mutual agreement on the terms of a withdrawal by McCaughey or any reduction in McCaughey’s interest in Boxwood. Because the auditor *877

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Bluebook (online)
485 S.E.2d 511, 225 Ga. App. 874, 97 Fulton County D. Rep. 1260, 1997 Ga. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaughey-v-murphy-gactapp-1997.