Seguin v. Boyd

654 P.2d 808, 134 Ariz. 172, 1982 Ariz. App. LEXIS 569
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJune 8, 1982
Docket2 CA-CIV 4161
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 654 P.2d 808 (Seguin v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seguin v. Boyd, 654 P.2d 808, 134 Ariz. 172, 1982 Ariz. App. LEXIS 569 (Ark. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

BIRDSALL, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of appellee Seguin and against appel *173 lant Boyd in litigation arising from their controversy as to ownership of certain property and their respective interests therein. Appellee sued appellant to recover real and personal property and money damages. His main theory was that the parties had entered into an oral agreement for the purpose of buying and selling real estate. Appellee was to provide the funds and labor to purchase and improve the property; appellant was to buy and sell the properties. According to appellee’s complaint, he had provided sums in excess of $130,000. Appellee also alleged that the principal amounts of two promissory notes executed by appellant were due and owing, and sought judgment against appellant for those amounts of $6,800 and $23,000.

Appellee requested various types of relief, including an order for accounting of partnership affairs. A lengthy trial was held and voluminous exhibits are part of the record. The trial court made extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law. The findings of fact pertinent to this appeal are as follows. The parties entered into a partnership agreement for the purpose of buying and selling real estate. Appellee was to receive his entire original investment, including reasonable compensation for his labor, plus any monies advanced to appellant for her interest in the partnership. After appellee had been reimbursed in full, the parties would equally divide any profit. Appellee owned as his sole and separate properties Lot 8 of Bonita Acres and the Rock-Fairmount land (R-2 lot). He conveyed Lot 8 to the partnership as his 50% contribution and conveyed the R-2 lot to appellant, who conveyed it to the partnership as her 50% contribution. The court also found that a total of $170,596.89 was contributed to the partnership accounts by appellant contributing $900 of her separate funds and appellee contributing $169,696.89 of his separate funds, and $21,000 was contributed from the refinancing of the Van Burén property. Appellee used $42,251.24 for his personal business and the balance was used for partnership property or appellant’s personal use. No funds remained in the bank account and no partnership property had been sold.

The Van Burén property, Lot 118 (Sunrise Presidio Townhomes), Lot 8, and the R-2 lot were found to be partnership properties with each partner owning one-half. Certain properties were found to be the respective parties’ separate property, including the East Camden property belonging to appellant, as to which appellee was given a lien in the amount of $6,200 without interest, the lien to be recorded and the sum to be paid to appellee if and when appellant sold the property. Various items of personal property were found to be gifts from appellee to appellant. The two promissory notes executed by appellant and totaling $29,800 were to be added to a money judgment in favor of appellee and against appellant. Finally, the court found that appellant owed appellee the following sums of money as repayment for loans: (1) $2,500 for a Winterhaven property purchase option, (2) $6,239 for money advanced by appellee in connection with the North Ralph property, (3) $6,200 for the loan concerning the East Camden property, and (4) $15,000, a loan in connection with Lot 118.

The court concluded that Van Burén, Lot 8, Lot 118, and R-2 were partnership properties; that appellee should have judgment against appellant in the amount of $149,-552.39 plus $29,800 ($6,800 and $23,000 promissory notes) for a total of $179,352.39, with payment secured by a lien in that amount against the four partnership properties; and that appellee should have judgment against appellant for the $2,500, $6,239, and $6,200 loans, a total of $14,939. Appropriate documents were to be prepared by the parties to place the partnership properties in each of their names. Finally, the court directed:

“As the partnership property is sold, the net proceeds due Boyd shall be applied in satisfaction of the Judgment in favor of plaintiff Seguin. When and if the Judgment in favor of plaintiff Seguin and against defendant Boyd is satisfied, any remaining proceeds, if any, shall be divided equally between the parties. The term ‘net proceeds’ is intended to mean *174 the amount that would actually be paid or owing to the parties after satisfaction of all liens and closing costs of the sale of any property.
That Seguin shall not be permitted to seek satisfaction of the aforementioned Judgment stated in paragraph 9 above against Boyd’s personal property unless there is a balance due on the Judgment after the partnership properties have been sold.”

Before addressing the issues presented, we find it appropriate to comment upon the state of the record before us, which can best be characterized as a model of disarray. Each party to this lawsuit was attempting to salvage as much as possible from a confused business arrangement. It is quite clear that the parties created the situation themselves — the record is replete with instances of actions taken by one or the other to avoid “tax problems” or to obtain more favorable bank financing for their purchases. There are no partnership books, only cancelled checks and bank records. The appellee’s “bookkeeper” prepared statements from these records, and a summary from these. This appeal can best be compared to a 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle, which we have tried to solve with little help from counsel. The trial court, after determining that a partnership existed, should have appointed a master to state an account instead of disposing of the whole case. Brandenburg v. Brandenburg, 234 Ark. 1117, 356 S.W.2d 625 (1962). However, to avoid additional expenditure of judicial time which remand for a formal accounting would require, and because the parties have each made certain concessions and because, despite the confused state of the record, the actual final result can be accurately determined, we are able to proceed without a further accounting.

Appellant attacks the sufficiency of the evidence to support the money judgment awarded to appellee and to support a finding that the R-2 lot was partnership property. She also contends that the trial court erred in ordering that the judgment be satisfied out of the net proceeds due appellant and if such net proceeds were insufficient, allowing satisfaction of any remaining balance due from appellant’s personal property.

Appellant’s position in the trial court and on appeal is that the R-2 lot belonged to her as her sole and separate property because it was conveyed to her by appellee as a gift. The evidence, both documentary and testimonial, shows otherwise, and demonstrates that the conveyance to appellant of the R-2 lot was solely for the purpose of supplying appellant with a contribution to the partnership. The trial court found, and there is evidentiary support for the finding, that appellee owned Lot 8 and the R-2 lot as his separate property. It also found that he had conveyed the R-2 lot to the appellant, who had conveyed it to the partnership as her 50% contribution. This finding, however, conflicts with the finding that appellant owes appellee $6,800 plus $23,000 on the promissory notes executed as part of these “machinations.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
654 P.2d 808, 134 Ariz. 172, 1982 Ariz. App. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seguin-v-boyd-arizctapp-1982.