Parker v. Northern Mixing Co.

756 P.2d 881, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 82, 1988 WL 53494
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1988
DocketS-1667, S-1737
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 756 P.2d 881 (Parker v. Northern Mixing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Northern Mixing Co., 756 P.2d 881, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 82, 1988 WL 53494 (Ala. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

A partnership dissolved, and the partners sued each other over the proper distribution of assets and losses. This appeal raises legal issues regarding awards of prejudgment interest and the sharing of partnership losses. The parties also challenge factual findings of the superior court concerning specific aspects of the partnership agreement, various elements of damages, and disputes over items allowed and disallowed in the final accounting.

I. FACTS

Early in 1984, long-time acquaintances Douglas Guthrie (“Douglas”) and Daniel Mark Parker, III (“Ike”) discussed the possibility of operating an asphalt plant in the central Kenai Peninsula area. Ike had considerable experience in the asphalt paving business and, in 1983, had established his present business, Parker Paving Corporation (“PPC”). Douglas is employed as a salesman by Guthrie Machinery Company (“GMC"), a corporation owned by his father, C.J. Guthrie (“C.J.”), which sells new and used asphalt plants and accessories.

In June 1984, Douglas, Ike, and C.J. orally agreed to purchase an asphalt plant located in Kamloops, British Columbia. After transporting the plant to Soldotna, they would commence operations to supply asphalt to PPC. The terms of this agreement are disputed. Douglas and C.J. (“the Guth-ries”) claim that C.J. individually or through GMC would supply start-up capital for the asphalt venture (known as Northern Mixing Company or “NMC”), and that CJ.’s advance would be replaced by permanent financing provided by an institutional lender. The Guthries also claim that, pursuant to the agreement: Douglas and Ike would be equally responsible for repayments of the permanent financing and would each provide financial statements, security for his share of the financing, and a statement of work in progress; Douglas and Ike would manage NMC and each own 40% of the corporate stock; and Douglas would be paid $2,500 per month for managing the operation of the asphalt plant. Finally, they claim that C.J. was to own the remaining 20% of the corporate stock in return for securing the financing, and that Ike agreed to make available his and PPC’s financial statements and to furnish real property in Oregon as security.

Ike agrees that C.J. was to secure financing for NMC and that NMC was intended to be a corporation. Ike further agrees that he and Douglas were to be responsible for the business, but he disputes any agreement that he was to provide security or any financial statements in connection with long-term financing of NMC or that Doug-

*884 las was to receive any additional compensation for his participation in managing the business.

The superior court found that all the parties expected C.J. to be able to secure long-term financing to replace his initial investment. It found further that Ike would provide financial information to aid the financing, but that Ike’s obligation to provide security arose only when a likely source of financing had been identified. The superior court also found that, although the reasonable value of Douglas’s services for the period during which he worked was $2,500 per month, “there was no meeting of the minds among the principals of NMC” to pay him a salary in that or any other amount.

The asphalt plant operated for only about two months, in 1984. When the parties decided to discontinue the business relationship in the winter of 1984-85, they were not able to reach an agreement concerning the allocation of NMC’s assets, profits, and liabilities.

The Guthries filed a complaint against Ike in superior court seeking possession of the asphalt plant, damages for diminution in the plant’s value equal to its reasonable rental value while in Ike’s possession, and an accounting of all income and disbursements of NMC. 1 C.J. (through GMC) claimed expenses of $93,477.16 incident to the original financing of NMC, of which $84,829.09 is acknowledged by Ike as properly chargeable to NMC. Included in the $6,022.84 of disputed charges 2 are a fine and attorney’s fees incurred as a result of operating the asphalt production plant without a required environmental permit, and certain credit card charges. C.J. also claimed $19,863.68 in interest on his advances, all of which Ike disputes. Ike (through PPC) in turn claimed expenses incident to operation of NMC of $151,-291.66, of which $95,413.39 is acknowledged by the Guthries as chargeable to NMC. Included in the $55,878.27 of disputed charges are trucking and equipment rental charges, land rent, approximately $22,000 for rock, certain payroll charges, and the cost of repair work — application of a “slurry coat” to a finished project — necessitated by the plant’s production of some faulty batches of asphalt. PPC also owes NMC $92,320.00 for asphalt produced and sold to PPC in 1984.

The superior court found that the fine, attorney’s fees, and the cost of the repair work were properly charged against the business. Pursuant to its finding that NMC, although intended ultimately to be a corporation, was a de facto partnership of Ike and Douglas, the superior court applied Alaska’s Uniform Partnership Act, AS 32.-05.010-.430, to settle their rights and liabilities. 3 The superior court found that the *885 partnership was dissolved during the winter of 1984-85 due to the parties’ inability to reach an agreement for the operation of the asphalt plant in 1985. According to the superior court, neither party was at fault in causing the dissolution of the partnership since either could terminate it at will under AS 32.05.260(1)(B). 4

The court determined that C.J. was at all material times a creditor of NMC based on his furnishing the start-up capital for the company, that he never became a shareholder because NMC never issued any stock or operated as a going business, and that although he was to share in NMC’s gross returns, he was not for that reason alone a partner. 5 The superior court further found that there was no agreement by the partnership or its individual partners to pay C.J. any interest.

The superior court determined that the partnership’s sole assets were the plant itself and related equipment, and the accounts receivable from PPC. Based on C.J.’s testimony, the court’s valuation of the plant was $76,887.73, 6 and the PPC receivable was $92,320.00. NMC’s total asset value, including prejudgment interest of $13,625.28, was thus $182,833.01. 7 The amount owed C.J., NMC’s sole creditor, was established as $88,956.40. As indicated previously, the court found that there were no agreements between Ike and Douglas concerning compensation for each other’s services and concluded that, because NMC produced no profits for distribution, the only sums due the partners were for their contributions. Douglas contributed services valued at $7,500, and Ike contributed services, equipment and expenditures of $134,477.62.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 P.2d 881, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 82, 1988 WL 53494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-northern-mixing-co-alaska-1988.