Slaton v. Jones

195 S.W.3d 392, 88 Ark. App. 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 13, 2004
DocketCA 03-1116
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 195 S.W.3d 392 (Slaton v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slaton v. Jones, 195 S.W.3d 392, 88 Ark. App. 140 (Ark. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Andree Layton Roaf, Judge.

Appellant Paul Slaton appeals the order of the Pope County Circuit Court finding a joint venture and dividing the business inventory between appellant and appellee Karen Jones, and imposing a constructive trust on the real property from which the businesses were conducted. Slaton argues that the trial court erred in finding a partnership between the parties and in imposing a constructive trust on the real property. We find no error and affirm.

Appellant and appellee cohabited for approximately twenty-six years but never married. During that time, the parties operated separate businesses out of the same location, known as the Emporium. The relationship ended when appellant changed the locks and asked appellee to leave. Appellee filed suit alleging conversion and seeking damages, dissolution of a partnership, replevin of her personal property, and the imposition of a constructive trust on the real property, titled in appellant’s name, from which the businesses were conducted. Appellant failed to answer the complaint.

Appellee testified that she and appellant met and went into business in the mid-1970s. She stated that appellant started his business, Paul’s Rare Coins and Books, as a small coin shop in the corner of another retail store. She stated that, after appellant moved to another location and changed the business name to Emporium, she started buying and selling jewelry through appellant’s business, before she technically started her own business, Plantation Antiques & Jewelry (Plantation), in 1987. She stated that she received the money from the jewelry sales while appellant received the money from his items. She stated that the parties were not partners in business and that she always wanted everything to be separate. Appellee denied that money from Emporium was used to start her business. She stated that the 1987 inventory of $33,000 came from her previous sales, which were then applied back into the business. Appellee stated that she had her own money and occasionally received some from her father but that appellant never gave her any money.

Appellee testified that, for the first two or three years the parties were together, money for bills came from the sale of books and then she began depositing money into Emporium’s purchase account to cover the bills. She stated that she paid the bills, although appellant may have paid a few bills. She described the account as a joint account. She stated that, if there was not enough money in the account, she deposited money from jewelry she sold. She also testified that she made jewelry purchases from that account in order to build appellant’s standing in the jewelry trade. Appellee also admitted that appellant may have deposited funds from items he sold into this account but that this was not usually done because appellant had a separate account. She said that, after book sales declined, approximately ten years ago, there were not enough book sales to cover expenses and that she had to contribute funds to cover the cost of the books.

Appellee testified that, some years prior to trial, she discovered that, although she had believed the parties were purchasing the building together, appellant had actually purchased it and had it titled solely in his name. She stated further that, at that time, both parties were making the payments on the building.

Concerning the inventory in the building, appellee opined that she owned 95% of the jewelry and 70% of the antique furniture. She admitted that, although she owned a few sets of coins, approximately 95% to 98% of them belonged to appellant.

Mike Summers, a certified public accountant, testified that he had prepared appellee’s tax returns for several years and that her returns included a schedule showing that Plantation Antiques & Jewelry was operated as a sole proprietorship. Summers stated that, if more than one person had owned the business, appellee would have filed partnership tax returns.

Patty Austin testified that she worked for the parties for approximately twenty years before she became employed as a clerk at another store. She testified that, although the general public assumed that the parties’ businesses were owned together, they were actually operated as separate entities. Austin opined that appellee owned 70% of the merchandise that included the furniture and jewelry and that appellant owned 30%, and that this apportionment was maintained over the entire time of her employment. Austin stated that 85% of the jewelry belonged to appellee but that appellant limited his sales to coins, firearms, Civil War relics, and war relics in general. She stated that, while appellant had some jewelry and nice antique pieces, the coins were his mainstays. She also stated that appellee’s jewelry business brought in the most money.

Austin testified that the parties placed different-colored tags on the merchandise to denote which item belonged to whom and that each party kept the money from the sales of his or her inventory. She testified that the parties maintained separate accounts. She stated that there was one cash register but that, if a specific item belonging to one party or the other was sold, the money was not placed in the register but was set aside and disbursed to the proper party. She stated that the money from the sales of books and magazines was placed into the cash register.

Austin testified that appellee wrote checks from and handled the books for an account that contained only appellant’s money. She also testified that appellee paid the utility bills mostly out of her separate account. She stated that appellant made arrangements for the purchase of the building several years prior to trial but that appellee usually made the monthly mortgage payment from the Emporium account.

Appellant stated that he owned a business known as the Emporium that soldjewelry, rare coins, and small antiques. He said that he started the business under the name of Paul’s Rare Coins and Books, which changed locations as it grew. He described the jewelry as antique jewelry, coin rings, and diamond rings that he bought at gun or coin shows and at flea markets. Appellant stated that appellee oyvned only a few items of jewelry that she brought with her from California. He denied knowing that appellee had been selling jewelry for which she claimed ownership, stating that he had purchased all of the jewelry inventory. Appellant stated that, although appellee did have some minimal expertise in jewelry, hers was not as great as his own.

According to appellant, the parties started Plantation together using the money from Emporium. He testified that the assets were shifted from Emporium to Plantation but that he was the owner of 85% to 90% of the assets because the purchase money came from items he owned prior to the relationship between the parties. He later stated that 95% of the inventory was his and that he had provided all of the funds to purchase the antiques and furniture, the jewelry, and the coins. He denied that appellee used money from her personal account to pay bills on behalf of the store and stated that some of the profits from Emporium were used to pay bills. He denied that appellee had her separate business and asserted that he totally owned Plantation. He stated that, on the advice of a tax attorney, he and appellee had verbally agreed that she would claim Plantation for tax purposes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W.3d 392, 88 Ark. App. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaton-v-jones-arkctapp-2004.