Robertson v. Jacobs Cattle Co.

292 Neb. 195
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2015
DocketS-15-026
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 292 Neb. 195 (Robertson v. Jacobs Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Jacobs Cattle Co., 292 Neb. 195 (Neb. 2015).

Opinion

- 195 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports ROBERTSON v. JACOBS CATTLE CO. Cite as 292 Neb. 195

James E. Robertson et al., appellants, v. Jacobs Cattle Company, a partnership, et al., appellees. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed December 4, 2015. No. S-15-026.

1. Partnerships: Accounting: Appeal and Error. An action for a partner- ship dissolution and accounting between partners is one in equity and is reviewed de novo on the record. 2. Equity: Appeal and Error. On appeal from an equity action, an appel- late court resolves questions of law and fact independently of the trial court’s determinations. 3. Courts: Judgments. The proper place to pay a judgment is the clerk of the court in which the judgment is obtained. 4. Courts: Appeal and Error. Where the Nebraska Supreme Court reverses a judgment and remands a cause to the district court for a spe- cial purpose, on remand, the district court has no power or jurisdiction to do anything except to proceed in accordance with the mandate as interpreted in the light of the Supreme Court’s opinion.

Appeal from the District Court for Valley County: K arin L. Noakes, Judge. Affirmed.

Patrick J. Nelson, of Law Office of Patrick J. Nelson, L.L.C., for appellants.

David A. Domina and Megan N. Mikolajczyk, of Domina Law Group, P.C., L.L.O., and Gregory G. Jensen for appellees.

Heavican, C.J., Connolly, McCormack, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, and Stacy, JJ. - 196 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports ROBERTSON v. JACOBS CATTLE CO. Cite as 292 Neb. 195

Cassel, J. INTRODUCTION For the third time, we consider an appeal from a judi- cial dissociation of four partners from a family agricultural partnership having assets consisting primarily of real estate. The main issue is whether the district court, in recalculat- ing the buyout distributions, correctly implemented our man- date from the second appeal. The dissociating partners rely on a hypothetical capital gain on the real estate but ignore that this “gain” exceeds the total profit on the hypothetical sale of all of the partnership’s assets. We affirm the district court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND In Robertson v. Jacobs Cattle Co. (Robertson I),1 we upheld the judicial dissociation of four partners of the Jacobs Cattle Company, a family partnership owning agricultural land in Valley County, Nebraska. However, we reversed the district court’s calculation of the buyout price to be paid to the four dissociating partners and remanded the cause for further pro- ceedings on that issue. In the second appeal (Robertson II),2 we again reversed the district court’s calculation of the buyout price to be paid to the dissociating partners. We remanded the cause with direction that the court calculate the buyout distributions “by adding 12.5 percent of the profit received from a hypothetical sale of the partnership’s assets . . . to the value of each dissociated partner’s capital account.”3 The district court purported to fol- low our mandate, but the dissociating partners filed this appeal from its order. The underlying facts concerning this appeal are primarily contained in Robertson I and will be briefly summarized here.

1 Robertson v. Jacobs Cattle Co., 285 Neb. 859, 830 N.W.2d 191 (2013). 2 Robertson v. Jacobs Cattle Co., 288 Neb. 846, 852 N.W.2d 325 (2014). 3 Id. at 853, 852 N.W.2d at 331. - 197 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports ROBERTSON v. JACOBS CATTLE CO. Cite as 292 Neb. 195

The Jacobs Cattle Company was organized in 1979. As noted above, the partnership consisted of agricultural land, compris- ing 1,525 acres. As of September 2011, the land was appraised at a value of $5,135,000. At the time of litigation, the partnership consisted of seven partners. (Our opinion in Robertson I stated that the partner- ship had six partners. But as indicated in Robertson II, one individual represented two trusts, and thus, the partnership had seven partners.) The partners included: • Ardith Jacobs, as trustee of the Leonard Jacobs Family Trust; • Ardith Jacobs, as trustee of the Ardith Jacobs Living Revocable Trust; • Dennis Jacobs; • Duane Jacobs; • Carolyn Sue Jacobs; • James E. Robertson; and • Patricia Robertson. In July 2007, Duane, Carolyn, James, and Patricia (collec- tively the dissociating partners) filed a complaint against the partnership, Ardith, and Dennis (collectively the remaining partners). The complaint sought a dissolution and winding up of the partnership under the Uniform Partnership Act of 1998. In an amended answer and counterclaim, the remaining part- ners alleged that dissociation, not dissolution, was the appro- priate remedy. After a bench trial, the district court determined that no grounds for dissolution of the partnership had been established under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 67-439(5) (Reissue 2009). However, the court ordered dissociation of the four partners by judicial expulsion pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 67-431(5)(a) and (c) (Reissue 2009). And after receiving buyout proposals from the parties, the court arrived at a distribution scheme wherein each of the dissociating partners received 5.33 percent of the total liquidation value of the partnership. In Robertson I, we affirmed the dissociation of the four partners and the date of the judicial expulsion as the valuation - 198 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports ROBERTSON v. JACOBS CATTLE CO. Cite as 292 Neb. 195

date of the partnership’s assets. We also observed that the buyout price was governed by Neb. Rev. Stat. § 67-434(2) (Reissue 2009), which provides: The buyout price of a dissociated partner’s interest is the amount that would have been distributable to the disso- ciating partner under subsection (2) of section 67-445 if, on the date of dissociation, the assets of the partnership were sold at a price equal to the greater of the liquidation value or the value based on a sale of the entire business as a going concern without the dissociated partner and the partnership were wound up as of that date. Interest must be paid from the date of dissociation to the date of payment. And another statute requires that profits and losses be cred- ited and charged to the partners’ accounts. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 67-445(2) (Reissue 2009) provides: Each partner is entitled to a settlement of all partnership accounts upon winding up the partnership business. In settling accounts among the partners, profits and losses that result from the liquidation of the partnership assets must be credited and charged to the partners’ accounts. The partnership shall make a distribution to a partner in an amount equal to any excess of the credits over the charges in the partner’s account. A partner shall contrib- ute to the partnership an amount equal to any excess of the charges over the credits in the partner’s account but excluding from the calculation charges attributable to an obligation for which the partner is not personally liable under section 67-418. We concluded that based upon the plain language of § 67-434(2), “the proper calculation must be based upon the assumption that the partnership assets, here the land, were sold on the date of dissociation, even though no actual sale occurs.”4

4 Robertson I, supra note 1, 285 Neb. at 877, 830 N.W.2d at 205. - 199 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports ROBERTSON v. JACOBS CATTLE CO. Cite as 292 Neb. 195

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