Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, Ltd. Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc. and Brian Weiner v. Gordon Weiner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 2005
Docket04-03-00926-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, Ltd. Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc. and Brian Weiner v. Gordon Weiner (Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, Ltd. Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc. and Brian Weiner v. Gordon Weiner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, Ltd. Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc. and Brian Weiner v. Gordon Weiner, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION



No. 04-03-00926-CV


SHADOW DANCE RANCH PARTNERSHIP, LTD.;

Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc.; and

Brian Weiner,

Appellants


v.


Gordon WEINER,

Appellee


From the 216th Judicial District Court, Bandera County, Texas

Trial Court No. 8147-01

Honorable Stephen B. Ables, Judge Presiding

Opinion by:    Sarah B. Duncan, Justice

Sitting:            Alma L. López, Chief Justice

Sarah B. Duncan, Justice

Phylis Speedlin, Justice

Delivered and Filed:   December 7, 2005


AFFIRMED

            Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, Ltd. (“the Partnership”); the Partnership’s general partner Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc. (“the Management Company”); and the chairman of the Management Company’s board of directors and its chief executive officer, as well as a limited partner of the Partnership, Brian Weiner, appeal the trial court’s judgment declaring that the Partnership’s other limited partner, Brian’s brother Gordon, “became entitled to dissolve [the Partnership] on June 25, 2001, under Article VII of the First Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership Of [the Partnership]” (“the Agreement”); the Partnership “dissolved on June 25, 2001, and has subsequently existed only for the limited purpose of being liquidated with reasonable promptness, pursuant to Article VII of [the Agreement]”; the Partnership and the Management Company “took no action whatsoever to liquidate” the Partnership; and Gordon is “the prevailing party” and entitled to recover his attorney’s fees in accordance with the jury’s verdict. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background

            On January 19, 1990, brothers Brian and Gordon Weiner entered into the Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, a general partnership organized for the purpose of owning and operating the Shadow Dance Ranch. On February 15, 1991, Brian and Gordon entered into the Agreement, which provides that the general partnership would be converted into a limited one, with Brian and Gordon each contributing his interest in the Ranch and receiving in exchange a 49.5% ownership interest and the Management Company contributing $15,798 and receiving in exchange a 1% ownership interest.

Capital Calls

            So that the Management Company would have sufficient funds to maintain the Ranch and operate its business, paragraph 4.3 of the Agreement provides that each partner is “obligated to contribute additional capital to the Partnership beyond their initial capital contributions upon demand of the General Partner, in its sole discretion ....” If a “Partner [was] unable or unwilling to make any or all of his proportionate contribution within thirty (30) days after [it became] due,” paragraph 4.4 provides that the remaining partners could make the defaulting partner’s contribution for him and, within thirty days after the default, elect to treat the contribution as either (A) a loan to the defaulting partner or (B) additional capital to be allocated to the paying partner’s capital account. If the paying partner elected to treat the contribution as additional capital, paragraph 4.4(i) provides that the partners’ ownership percentages would be adjusted accordingly.

            Without reference to paragraph 4.4, paragraph 6.2 of the Agreement provides that, “[i]f any Partner is unable or unwilling to make any or all of his proportionate additional contributions,” it is deemed a “Terminating Event”; and “such Partner shall be deemed as of the date of occurrence of such event to have made an offer to sell the entire interest of such Partner in this Partnership and the Property to the other Partners, who shall have the right to purchase the same on the terms hereinafter provided.” If the partners could not agree on a purchase price for the defaulting partner’s interest “within sixty (60) days after the event triggering the purchase,” then the purchasing partners were required to deliver to the selling partner a “notice requiring that an appraiser be appointed ....” If the partners were unable to agree on an appraiser within thirty days after delivery of the notice, the purchasing partners and the selling partner would “each have the right to appoint one appraiser, and the two appraisers so appointed shall then agree upon a third appraiser to be appointed.”

Marriage Addendum

            The Agreement also provides that if Gordon should marry during the Agreement’s term, he would “use his best efforts to obtain his spouse’s signature on an addendum to [the] Agreement evidencing that her community interest, if any, in and to any of his interest in the Partnership is subject to the terms and provisions of [the] Agreement in all respects ....” If Gordon was unable to obtain the signed addendum, his “marriage shall be treated as if it were an involuntary termination of his interest effective as of the day immediately preceding his marriage.” It is undisputed that Gordon married on August 4, 1991; and, on January 10, 1995, his wife signed a post-nuptial agreement disclaiming any interest in Gordon’s partnership interest.

Notice of Dissolution

            By April 1999, Gordon’s personal savings were depleted. Rather than go into debt to meet future capital calls, Gordon ceased paying capital calls in March 1999, declined to pay any further calls, and stopped performing his duties as president of the Management Company. Brian assumed the duties of president, paid Gordon’s proportionate share of the capital calls, and elected to treat the contributions as additional capital to be allocated to his account. As a result, Gordon’s initial 49.5% partnership interest was reduced to 39.3%, while Brian’s increased to 59.9%.

            So things stood on April 26, 2001 when Gordon paid the Management Company, and the Management Company accepted, $12,754.17, representing the March and April 2001 capital calls, and sent a notice of dissolution pursuant to paragraph 7.1, which provides that “[a]ny Partner ... shall have the power to cause the dissolution of the Partnership by giving sixty (60) days prior written notice to the other Partners of said Partner’s intention to dissolve the Partnership ....” Shortly thereafter, on May 9, 2001, the Management Company demanded payment of an unprecedented $268,158 capital call. Gordon paid this capital call with a cashier’s check, which the Management Company accepted and cashed without comment.

            Pursuant to paragraph 7.1, dissolution was to occur on June 25, 2001. However, on June 21, 2001, the Management Company – for the first time in six years – asked Gordon for the marital addendum required by paragraph 5.4 of the Agreement. The following day Gordon forwarded to the Management Company not only the marital addendum but a copy of the post-nuptial agreement signed by his wife six years earlier.

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Shadow Dance Ranch Partnership, Ltd. Shadow Dance Ranch Management Company, Inc. and Brian Weiner v. Gordon Weiner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shadow-dance-ranch-partnership-ltd-shadow-dance-ra-texapp-2005.