Simpson v. Simpson

689 P.2d 1040, 70 Or. App. 381
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 24, 1984
Docket16-81-07117; CA A27838
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 689 P.2d 1040 (Simpson v. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson v. Simpson, 689 P.2d 1040, 70 Or. App. 381 (Or. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

BUTTLER, P. J.

This action is one for an accounting and for dissolution of a partnership between brothers, Derril Simpson and Kerney Simpson.1 The partnership property consisted primarily, but not exclusively, of real property. After stipulating to the valuation of the properties and of their respective interests in each property, the parties submitted to the court the issue of how the properties should be allocated. Accounting on matters other than the real property was postponed by mutual agreement. The trial court entered a “Final Order and Judgment and Final Decree” allocating the properties as recommended by plaintiff (Derril).

Defendant (Kerney) appeals, claiming that the trial court erred by denying him an opportunity to put on further evidence as to the real property and the issues the parties agreed to postpone. We review de novo, ORS 19.125(3); Gleason v. Van Aernam, 9 Or 343, 345 (1881); Roesch v. Wachter, 48 Or App 893, 895, 618 P2d 448 (1980), affirm the trial court’s disposition of the real property, with one modification to reflect the parties’ stipulations, and remand for further proceedings.

After this action was commenced, the parties, at a pretrial hearing on May 25,1982, informed the court that they had reached a partial settlement. They signed a stipulation on September 1, 1982, which was incorporated by the trial court in an interlocutory decree on September 31,1982. That decree listed the real property owned by the partners, and an agreed percentage of each parcel to be credited to each partner. All past expenses incurred and income received with respect to the real property were deemed to be accounted for and merged in those agreed percentages.2 Unpaid taxes and taxes coming due after the agreement were to be paid “pro rata.”

The interlocutory decree also provided for the [384]*384appointment of an appraiser to evaluate the real property and to recommend an equitable allocation of the parcels to compensate the parties for their respective percentage interests in each parcel. In the event that the parties were unable to agree on an allocation after receiving the appraiser’s report, the issue of allocation was to be submitted to the trial court.

The stipulation did not provide for income received, and expenses (other than taxes) incurred after September, 1982. It expressly reserved the disposition of personal property for further negotiation.

The appraiser’s report established values for each parcel, and recommended an allocation. Both parties accepted the appraiser’s evaluations of the parcels. On the basis of those evaluations and the stipulated percentages, they agreed on a total value of each partner’s interest in the partnership. However, they were unable to agree on an allocation of parcels to approximate the agreed total value of each partner’s interest, and submitted that issue to the trial court.3

In preparation for the hearing on that issue, each party submitted a recommended allocation. Derril recommended adoption of the appraiser’s allocation, and a supplementary payment to Kerney to make the total value received by each party match the agreed total values of their interests. He proposed that the adjusting payment be due on sale of the property or by January 1, 1985, at the latest.

Kerney proposed a different allocation, and an immediate payment by him to Derril of an adjustment balance. He included in his proposal offsets for expenses incurred in improving one of the properties, and for some partnership personal property. He also raised the question of partnership income and expenses that had been received and incurred after the September, 1982, stipulation. He was particularly concerned that Derril would not pay the adjustment balance due under Derril’s proposal, and that January 1,1985, was too late for a non-interest bearing obligation to become due.

At the hearing on January 4, 1983, the parties reiterated their positions on the allocation of real property, and [385]*385their disagreement as to how and when Derril should be required to pay Kerney any adjustment balance he might be found to owe. Both parties urged the court to allocate the property immediately. The trial judge took the matter under advisement and told the parties that he would decide later whether to hear further argument or testimony. On February 17, the court asked Derril’s attorney to prepare an order using his recommended allocation and adjustment balance, but providing for payment of the balance simultaneously with the exchange of deeds to the real property. On February 24, counsel for Kerney asked the court to schedule a hearing for further testimony about the allocation, the personal property issues, and income received since the stipulation. No hearing was scheduled.

The “Final Order and Judgment and Final Decree” was entered on March 3,1983. That decree reflects the agreed-upon property values, ownership percentages, and total values; allocates the properties as recommended by Derril, and provides for a simultaneous adjustment payment. However, it does not mention the parties’ stipulation to prorate real property taxes or the allocation of personal property and post-stipulation income and expenses.

Kerney moved to vacate the judgment, and submitted an affidavit that summarized the evidence he would have presented had the court granted his earlier request for a further hearing. The court took no action on the motion, and this appeal followed.

First, we consider the unresolved matters of personal property and post-stipulation income and expenses. Derril claims that Kerney stipulated that those matters would never be heard by the court. Although the record does not tell us, apparently the court agreed. We do not believe that the stipulation went that far; rather, the parties agreed that those matters would be postponed in the hope that they could resolve them without judicial intervention. There is no evidence in the record that the parties did resolve those matters or that they agreed to dismiss them. Because we conclude that the trial court erred in not resolving those issues, the case must be remanded to complete the accounting.

Second, Kerney’s contention that the trial court erred in dividing the real property without allowing him to [386]*386present all of his evidence is not well taken. All of the facts necessary to allocate the real property had been stipulated to by the parties, who also agreed that the court could make the allocation. Kerney contends, however, that the result might have been different had he been allowed a further hearing. For a number of reasons, he must be deemed to have waived and not to have preserved his right. At the final hearing, counsel for Kerney did mention that further evidence might be presented, but assured the trial court that the bulk of that evidence would relate to Kerney’s objections to payment of the adjustment balance — that Derril would not pay it and that January 1, 1985, was too late for such a payment. The trial court was entitled to assume that such evidence would be unnecessary, because the decree met those objections by requiring Derril to pay the adjustment balance before he was entitled to receive his parcels of real property.

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Bluebook (online)
689 P.2d 1040, 70 Or. App. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-simpson-orctapp-1984.