Schoeller v. Schoeller

497 S.W.2d 860, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1201
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1973
DocketKCD 26203
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 497 S.W.2d 860 (Schoeller v. Schoeller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoeller v. Schoeller, 497 S.W.2d 860, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1201 (Mo. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

SWOFFORD, Judge.

This matter involves a long history of litigation affecting a family partnership. Its origin was a suit filed in 1967 by the plaintiff for a judicial dissolution of the partnership and for an accounting. It was brought against Forrest L. Schoeller and Sylvia A. Schoeller, plaintiff’s mother and father; William F. Schoeller and Madeline J. Schoeller, Robert L. Schoeller and Virginia L. Schoeller, plaintiff’s brothers and sisters-in-law, and Schoeller’s, Inc., a corporation organized by plaintiff’s brothers. The partnership between plaintiff, his father and mother and his two brothers was judicially admitted and the original trial *863 before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant father, Forrest L. Schoeller, only, in the amount of $7,521.03. The plaintiff appealed from this judgment, asserting that it was based upon erroneous factual conclusions and “that he was entitled to a decree of dissolution of the partnership and an accounting of his interest therein and his profits therefrom.”

In this first appeal, this court held that the partnership was dissolved in the spring of 1962 and that the plaintiff was entitled to an accounting and a judicial determination of his interest in the partnership as of the date of dissolution. It was further held that plaintiff was entitled under the Uniform Partnership Law, Chapter 358 RSMo 1969, to either (1) an amount equal in value to his capital in the partnership with interest thereon, or (2) his capital and the profits from the business attributable to the use of such in the continuing business of the enterprise. The original judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Schoeller v. Schoeller, 465 S.W.2d 648 (Mo.App. 1971 ). 1

In response to our mandate in the first appeal, the court below on September 17, 1971 appointed The Honorable William E. Turnage as Referee to hear the evidence and report to the court with reference to the partnership accounting. Thereafter, Referee Turnage held hearings, received evidence, and filed his report with the court below on February 16, 1972.

The trial court heard the parties’ exceptions to the Referee’s reports, received their stipulations as to certain matters, amended or modified the Referee’s report in certain particulars, and on April 12, 1972 entered his judgment from which this second appeal is taken by the plaintiff.

For the purpose of our review of this judgment, these facts are without dispute:

Defendants Forrest L. Schoeller and his wife Sylvia started a grocery business in Liberty, Missouri in 1955, and in January, 1959 they entered into a written partnership agreement with their three sons, the plaintiff Forrest J. Schoeller and the defendants Robert and William Schoeller. Under the terms of this agreement, the five (5) partners were to share equally in the profits and losses of this enterprise; defendants Forrest L. and Sylvia A. Schoeller contributed all of the capital (presumably the assets of their then business) and were to act as general managers and set the salaries of the other partners. The effective date of this partnership was January 5, 1959. The partnership continued until April 2, 1962, when it was dissolved. In about July of 1962, the father and mother, Forrest L. and Sylvia A. Schoeller, agreed to sell their interest in the partnership to their sons, defendants William and Robert, for $100,000.00 payable $10,000.00 per year, without interest, and the parents thereupon left Missouri and moved to Arizona.

Thereafter, as of January, 1963, William and Robert and their respective wives formed a corporation, defendant Schoel-ler’s, Inc., and all of the assets of the old partnership were transferred to and used thereafter by the corporation. There was never any cessation of the business nor any attempt to “wind up” the partnership. Plaintiff was not paid any salary nor did he receive any portion of the profits after April 2, 1962. It was accepted by the parties, for the purposes of the partnership accounting, that the plaintiff’s starting capital account in the partnership in January, 1959 was $11,383.48 and that his capital account on April 2, 1962 was $30,098.02.

*864 After our mandate in the first appeal, the plaintiff elected to assert his right to his capital account and the profit of the business after April 2, 1962 attributable to its use rather than interest thereon. Section 358.420 RSMo 1969.

In other areas of this record, the facts are not agreed, some are vague, and others are in apparent dispute. Where pertinent to our present decision, such facts will be hereafter noted.

The court below found:

1. The capital accounts, as shown on the records and by Stipulation of the parties, as of 4/2/62 were as follows (Exhibit No. 8-E) (the percentage figures are ours):
William S. 30,339.52 ( 30.0%)
Robert S. 30,077.49 ( 29.9%)
Forrest J. (Plaintiff) 30,098.02 ( 29.9%)
$100,804.90 (100.0%)
2. The plaintiff’s capital account should be reduced by the amount of $11,382.48 (his starting capital account, which he had not paid into the partnership) making his capital account $18,715.54 (or 18.566%) as of April 2, 1962.
3. Plaintiff’s share of the profits attributable to the use of his capital was $79,813.56. 2
4. Plaintiff was awarded judgment against all defendants in the amount of $18,715.54 (capital) plus $79,813.-56 (profit) or a total of $98,529.10.
5.

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Bluebook (online)
497 S.W.2d 860, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoeller-v-schoeller-moctapp-1973.