Solomont v. Polk Development Co.

245 Cal. App. 2d 488, 54 Cal. Rptr. 22, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1486
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 10, 1966
DocketCiv. 29757
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 245 Cal. App. 2d 488 (Solomont v. Polk Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solomont v. Polk Development Co., 245 Cal. App. 2d 488, 54 Cal. Rptr. 22, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1486 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

In May of 1959 appellant company purchased a parcel of real property in Santa Maria for cash and a deed of trust (covering the unpaid balance) which was made subordinate to a construction loan thereafter obtained in the sum of $300,000 for a 50-unit apartment building. Subsequently a “cost breakdown” submitted to the bank by appellant Rudnick certified that the total cost of construction would be $355,600. Construction of the building commenced on June 3, 1959. At or about this same time appellant Rudnick separately contacted the respondents, stating to them that he needed $80,000 to complete the project, the total cost of which would be $421,000. He proposed that this sum ($80,000) be raised by the formation of a limited partnership to be known as "Bunny Court,” appellant company being designated as general and executive managing partner. On June 5 partnership interests of $10,000 each were sold to respondents Sheridan and Shields who executed the partnership agreement prepared by Rudnick’s attorney; on June 7 respondent Solomont invested $40,000 in the enterprise, and on June 8 interests in the sum of $10,000 were purchased by respondents Leonard and Harry Schwimer, all three latter respondents executing the partnership agreement on the above respective dates. The building was completed and transferred to the partnership which operated it for about three years. Eventually it was lost on foreclosure; respondents brought this action to recover their investment—the partnership had theretofore become insolvent.

The complaint sought rescission of the agreement based upon alleged violations of the California Corporate Securities Act (Corp. Code, §§ 25000 et seq.), with alternative counts for *492 fraud, dissolution and winding up, as well as an accounting. The relief granted was an award of damages representing the amounts paid by respondents for their respective interests less contributions received by each of them from the operation of the apartment building. The appeal is from the judgment.

A permit concededly was not sought from the Corporation Commissioner for the sale of the interests in suit; basic, therefore, to the award of damages at bar is the sufficiency of the el aim that the partnership was not validly formed and consequently did not come within the exemption stated in section 25100, subdivision (l), Corporations Code, to the effect that such a permit is not required in transactions involving “Any partnership interest in a . . . limited partnership were certificates are executed, filed and recorded as provided by Sections 15502 and 15525 of the Corporations Code of the State of California, except partnership interests when offered to the public.” Prior to its decision, the trial court indicated by certain observations from the bench that the case appeared almost indistinguishable from Rivlin v. Levine, 195 Cal.App.2d 13 [15 Cal.Rptr. 587], where, upon the circumstances there presented, the court determined that a limited partnership interest was not a “security” within the exemption of section 25100, subdivision (l), supra, if the partners did not have the right of mutual selection of all their copartners. In the present proceeding, the investors not having been brought together as a group, a finding was eventually made that “There was no element of mutual selection of those who would constitute the membership of the purported limited partnership.” The assessment of damages stems not only from the above and related findings but from further findings that a fiduciary relationship existed between the parties which defendants breached by misrepresentations as to the actual cost of the building. Appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the above findings. With respect to Rivlin, they argue that it is the only authority which holds that the requirement of “mutual selection” must be met before a bona fide partnership is created and, even if such holding be accepted, the case is distinguishable from that at bar.

The present case consumed some seven days of trial, Out of the mass of evidence received, the following salient facts emerge which, at this stage of the proceedings, must be necessarily viewed in the light most favorable to respondents: Appellant Rudnicb, acting for appellant company, selected the investors at random. Respondents Sheridan and Shields were *493 the first to pay their money and sign the agreement which was drawn by Rudniek’s attorney. Neither knew the identity of the officers, directors or shareholders of appellant company, nor did they know the identity of the other investors. The same was true of respondent Solomont and respondents Schwimer who executed the agreement two to three days later (as the case may be) after Sheridan and Shields. Rudniek, it appears, endeavored to sell an interest to a brother of the Schwimers, but he declined to buy—it is suggested by respondents that he was the only member of the group approached by Rudniek who could be classified as a “sophisticated investor.” Rudniek admitted, in substance, that he sought out investors among his many friends who would not give him trouble, who would not take an active interest in the enterprise, and who had money. At no time thereafter did all of the limited partners meet one another, although Solomont and the brothers Schwimer all saw the signatures of Sheridan and Shields on the agreement subsequently presented to them for execution. It appears that respondents’ acknowledgments were not taken by the notary public in conformity with section 1185 of the Civil Code; it further appears that section 15502, subdivision (3) of the Corporations Code, as then in effect, was not complied with—although the certificate of limited partnership recites that the principal place of the partnership’s business is Los Angeles, it was never filed in the office of the county clerk of that county, and the same section was not promptly complied with in that the certificate was not recorded in the office of the county recorder of Santa Barbara until nine months later.

There were other deficiencies evidencing noncompliance with section 15502, supra. Although the statute provides that the certificate shall state the term for which the partnership is to exist, as well as the amount of cash contributed by each partner, the certificate erroneously fixes the date of commencement from the date of its execution whereas, in fact, it did not commence until the completion of the building; too, although the pertinent article of the instrument makes reference to the total contribution of $80,000 by the partners, such funds were deposited in the general corporate account of appellant company and used by that corporation.

■ There were still other deviations in the certificate from accepted procedures. Thus, although it is provided that the participation in the profits of the enterprise by the limited partners should be at least 50 percent, and while it is further *494 provided that ordinarily articles of limited partnership shall require the distribution of profits exclusively to contributors of tangible assets until 100 percent of the value has been returned (Cal. Admin. Code, tit. 10, ch. 3, subch. 2), the present certificate gives 60 percent of the net profits to the appellant company, as general partner, which sum is payable before the limited partners have recouped their investment.

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Bluebook (online)
245 Cal. App. 2d 488, 54 Cal. Rptr. 22, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solomont-v-polk-development-co-calctapp-1966.