Simich v. Culjak

178 P.2d 336, 27 Wash. 2d 403, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 288
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1947
DocketNo. 30051.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 336 (Simich v. Culjak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simich v. Culjak, 178 P.2d 336, 27 Wash. 2d 403, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 288 (Wash. 1947).

Opinion

Simpson, J.

This case involves a judgment rendered in a partnership accounting. Defendant, Dave Culjak, has appealed, and the plaintiff has cross-appealed from the judgment of the trial court.

Assignments of error on the part of appellant are: in finding that appellant’s failure to render a more complete accounting amounted to fraud; and in denying appellant any share in certain partnership assets.

Cross-appellant’s assignments of error relate to the division of the partnership assets.

The history of the partnership is as follows: February 15, 1935, Dave Culjak, Stanley Simich, Vic Danich, and Steve Puhich, entered into a partnership agreement. The document signed by all parties provided in part that: The partners would engage in the mining of coal in King county under the name of New Lake Young Coal; the capital of the partnership would consist of two thousand dollars, contributed by the partners in equal shares, to this to be added needed capital which would be furnished by the members in equal shares; if any partner should put in additional capital, or leave any part of his profits in the business, it should be “considered a debt to him from the partnership”; all moneys received, not required for current expenses, should be deposited in a bank, to be paid out by check.

Other portions of the agreement provided:

“All losses happening in the course of the said business shall be borne in the same proportions, unless the same shall happen through the wilful neglect or default (and not the mistake or error) of either of the said partners, in which case the loss so incurred shall be made good by the partner through whose such neglect or default such losses shall arise. . . .

“Each partner shall, upon every reasonable request, give to the others a true account of all transactions relating to the firm’s business, and full information of all letters, accounts, writings and other things which shall come into his hands or to his knowledge concerning its business. . . .

“Proper books of account shall be kept by the said part *405 ners, and entries made therein of all such matters, transactions and things as are usually entered in books of account kept by persons engaged in the same or similar business. Such books, and all partnership letters, papers and documents shall be kept at the firm’s counting-house or office, and each partner shall at all times have free access to examine, copy and take extracts from the same. . . .

“That at the end of their partnership the said partners will make each to the other full and correct accounts of all things relating to their said business, and will in all things truly adjust the same; and that all the stock and effects, and the gains and increase thereof, which shall then appear to be remaining either in money, goods, wares, fixtures, debts or otherwise, shall be divided between them in the same shares and proportion that they have contributed the firm capital.

“Any partner laboring in or otherwise being actively engaged in the partnership business shall receive for such services such wage or compensation, in addition to his share of the profits, as the majority of the partners may agree upon or in accordance with the regular scale of wages for the kind and nature of services rendered by such working partner.”

The mining venture was not profitable, and in 1942 a receiver was appointed to take charge of the partnership business and assets. The business was liquidated, and the receiver paid into court the sum of $3,126.59, for the benefit of the partners. Danich withdrew from the partnership June 28, 1939, and his interest is of no importance in the present litigation. January 25, 1943, the court entered its interlocutory order, dissolving the partnership and providing that the defendant partners, Dave Culjak and Steve Puhich, should make a

“ . . . full, accurate, and complete account of all of the partnership assets and properties, the amount of money due each of the partners, and the interest of each of the partners in said partnership property and assets.”

The accounting was made by way of an auditor’s report and covered the business operations of the partnership as shown by its books from June 1, 1939, to June 10, 1942. Respondent filed exceptions to the report, and the trial was *406 had with the result that the court entered its decree which provided in part as follows:

“Each of the parties to this action at the time of entering into the partnership agreement on the 15th day of January, 1935, invested in said partnership business the sum of $500.00 each. That during the remainder of the year 1935 the plaintiff invested in said partnership an additional $5700.00, the defendant, Dave Culjak, an additional $2700.00 and the defendant, Steve Puhich, did not invest any further sum in said partnership. . . . The court finds that the defendant, Dave Culjak, was in full charge of the business of the partnership, acted as the manager thereof, received and disbursed substantially all cash belonging to the partnership; that he kept the time-books of all parties employed by the partnership. That at one time the said Culjak kept two sets of time-books covering the same period and a part of the same employees. That it appears from the time-books so kept that the said Culjak changed the entries in said time-books after the first entry with reference to his own time so as to increase his time allowance as it appears therein, thereby increasing his wages. That it also appears that shortly before the receiver of the partnership was appointed that the defendant, Culjak, withdrew $1700.00, the whole bank account of the partnership, from the bank in which it was deposited and deposited it in his own name. That for some time prior to the commencement of this action the defendant, Culjak, refused to allow the plaintiff to examine the books and accounts of the partnership. That no accounting has ever been made by the said defendants or either of them of the disposition of said $1700.00. That the defendants failed to file any account of the transactions of the partnership for the period from the date of the formation of said partnership until June 1939 and no account has been furnished for that period. That the court is unable to determine from the partial account furnished by the defendants or from the evidence introduced by them on trial what the actual condition of the partnership account is and what the actual amounts are which each of the partners would be entitled to had a correct account been kept. That the acts and omissions of the defendant, Culjak, in failing to keep proper books of account and failing to furnish plaintiff with a detailed account of the partnership business as ordered by the court is a fraud upon the plaintiff. . . . that from June 1, 1939, to and including June 10, 1942, the defendant, Steve Puhich, performed labor for the partnership of the *407 value of $5884.61. That he was paid on account of said labor the sum of $539.00. That said defendant is entitled to interest at 6% on yearly balances on the amounts due for said labor and thus computed there is due him $6895.65 in addition to his original investment of $500.00, making a total of $7395.65 due him.

“That during the same period the plaintiff, Stanley Simich, performed labor for the partnership of the value of $4373.26.

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Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 336, 27 Wash. 2d 403, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simich-v-culjak-wash-1947.