Neilsen v. Holmes

186 P.2d 197, 82 Cal. App. 2d 315, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1206
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1947
DocketCiv. 3476
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 197 (Neilsen v. Holmes) 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
Neilsen v. Holmes, 186 P.2d 197, 82 Cal. App. 2d 315, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1206 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

*317 MARKS, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to set aside an agreement and for an accounting of the affairs of a partnership which operated under the name of California Carob Plantations. Judgment was rendered for defendants and this appeal followed.

Under date of April 20, 1920, an equal partnership was formed between the F. D. Cornell Company, a California corporation, and Lawrence Holmes for the purpose of developing, planting to Carob trees, and subdividing and selling a large tract of land in Riverside County, California. Some years later, part of this property was taken in eminent domain proceedings by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California as a reservoir and dam site. Counsel for defendants now characterize this transaction as producing “a real pot of gold at the end of the rainbow of their dreams,” and credits these great and unexpected profits as the principal cause of the present litigation. (See Metropolitan Water Dist. v. Adams (Cal.App.), 99 P.2d 659.)

Under date of January 10, 1922, a partnership agreement was entered into between the F. D. Cornell Company, Lawrence Holmes and Neilsen and Harris, a partnership composed of Thor H. Neilsen, the plaintiff here, and Gertrude E. Harris, now the defendant Gertrude E. Harris Holmes. Under this agreement Neilsen and Harris acquired a one-third interest in the partnership and its assets for $5,000.

On July 7, 1922, Mary Taylor bought a one-sixth interest in the partnership from the F. D. Cornell Company. An exhibit to the contract of purchase specified the real estate belonging to the partnership as five tracts, one of 480 acres, another of 105 acres less 30 acres, the third of 220 acres, the fourth of 80 acres, and the fifth of 320 acres.

There were other transfers of interests in the partnership which it is not necessary to detail. It is not disputed that on November 24,1936, Lawrence Holmes had a two-fifths interest, Gertrude E. Harris Holmes a one-fifth interest, Marie O. Holmes a one-fifth interest and Thor H. Neilsen, or her assignee, a one-fifth interest in the partnership. There was no subsequent change in these percentages except the elimination of the assignee of Thor H. Neilsen from the transaction.

Plaintiff gave notice of dissolution of the partnership about April 13, 1936, and she also demanded an accounting of its affairs. In response to the ^demand for an accounting there was prepared what is referred to as the “Northrop Account,” which purported to be a complete accounting of the affairs *318 of the partnership from January 10, 1922, to July 31, 1936. It contained a detailed list of the assets of the partnership.

Under date of November 24, 1936, Lawrence Holmes and Gertrude B. Harris Holmes, as first parties, and Thor H. Neilsen, as second party, executed a contract to which were attached numerous exhibits including a copy of the Northrop Account. At that time Thor H. Neilsen was represented by at least one of the attorneys who is appearing for her here.

One paragraph of the contract provides in part as follows:

That the first parties claim and represent that the accounting, a copy of which is attached hereto and marked Exhibit G, is a true, correct, and just accounting of the affairs of the California Carob Plantations partnership and of their management of the same, and of the interests of the respective partners therein, and of all of the partnership holdings, and second party hereby accepts, ratifies and approves it as such, and waives all right to hereafter dispute its correctness, and accepts said accounting and statement thereof as contained in said Exhibit G as full, true and correct and as a final accounting to July 31,1936, and agrees that paragraph marked 1 of this agreement sets forth correctly the respective interests of the members of said partnership on November 28, 1935. . . .”

This action was filed on July 10, 1943. It sought, among other things, a rescission of the contract of November 24, 1936, and an accounting of all the affairs of the California Carob Plantations from January 10, 1922.

Defendants stood upon and asserted the legality, binding effect, fairness and correctness of the Northrop Account and the contract of November 24, 1936. They realized that plaintiff was entitled to an accounting of the affairs of the partnership after July 31, 1936, when large sums of money had been collected from the Metropolitan Water District under a compromise of the judgment in the eminent domain proceedings. They employed Ralph G. Ritchie, a certified public accountant, who prepared a detailed accounting of the affairs of the partnership from July 31, 1936, the date of the conclusion of the Northrop Account. Among many other things it shows that plaintiff had been paid in cash $31,182.37 and that there was “Impounded by order of court to cover disputed claims: In re Thor Nielsen claim $65153.32.” Some of the impounded money has been withdrawn with the consent of the court based on stipulations!

*319 After a lengthy trial findings were made to the effect that there had been no fraud, concealment or mistake in the Northrop Account; that there had been no fraud, coercion, concealment, misrepresentation or mistake in executing the contract of November 24, 1936, from which we have quoted; that plaintiff was bound by its provisions; that the management- of the affairs of the partnership by Lawrence Holmes had been fair, equitable and just and in accordance with the rules of law governing a managing partner; that he had not personally profited from his position of managing partner; that the accountings already made were, as slightly modified by evidence, correct, and correctly reflected the condition and affairs of the partnership; that plaintiff had been paid more than she was entitled to as a partner, so that there was no further occasion for further accounting, there being nothing to account for. Judgment was entered for defendants and the impounded moneys were ordered released. No judgment was rendered against plaintiff for return of the overpayments to her which the evidence indicates amounted to $1,542.

Plaintiff presents three grounds for a reversal of the judgment against her, which are as follows:

“First: To the right of plaintiff to an accounting for the period from July 31, 1936, forward;
“Second: To the proposition that all the properties for which an award was made to any of the defendants herein in either of said eminent domain proceedings are partnership assets; and
“Third: To the right of plaintiff to set aside said agreement of November 24, 1936, and said purported accounting as of July 31, 1936, and to obtain an accounting of the affairs of the partnership from its inception.”

The arguments presented under the three headings are numerous and varied. They all gather around an attack on the correctness of the Northrop Account and the Ralph G. Ritchie Account which were approved by the trial court and taken as final and conclusive, except as to the exact amount of the overpayment to paintiff which was reduced by the testimony of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 197, 82 Cal. App. 2d 315, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neilsen-v-holmes-calctapp-1947.