Steinberg v. Goldstein

303 P.2d 80, 145 Cal. App. 2d 692, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1400
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1956
DocketCiv. 5351
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 303 P.2d 80 (Steinberg v. Goldstein) 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
Steinberg v. Goldstein, 303 P.2d 80, 145 Cal. App. 2d 692, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1400 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

*695 COUGHLIN, J. pro tem. *

This is an appeal from an order upon a petition by a receiver requesting instructions.

The plaintiff and defendant are licensed physicians and surgeons. In 1947, they formed a partnership to engage in the practice of medicine and surgery with principal offices in the city of Fresno, California.

On April 4, 1950, the plaintiff commenced this action for a dissolution of the partnership, an accounting, the appointment of a receiver, and damages. The plaintiff alleged that, without his consent, the defendant “opened an office for himself” in Visalia, using partnership funds to equip and pay its expenses. In his answer, the defendant alleges that the partnership opened the Visalia office, with the consent of plaintiff, and admits that partnership funds were used to “equip . . . and to pay expenses” of this office. During all of this time the partners were maintaining an office in Fresno.

A receiver was appointed forthwith. By order dated June 30, 1950, at which time the parties were maintaining separate offices and practicing their professions separate and apart, the receiver was instructed to make an inventory of “all assets of the partnership” and “to permit the defendant to use the equipment and supplies” which were on hand in both the Fresno and Visalia offices; the defendant was to pay “unto the said partnership” the rental of such equipment and the market value of such supplies as may be determined to be partnership property at the trial of the action on the merits.

The defendant remained in possession of these offices, using the equipment and supplies as needed.

On November 30, 1950, the trial court, in another department, entered an interlocutory judgment decreeing the dissolution of the partnership, appointing a referee to effect an accounting between the parties and reserving jurisdiction to proceed in accordance with law.

Thereafter, in a report and accounting filed by him, the receiver alleged that he had taken possession of the Fresno office together with the equipment and supplies therein, which he described as “property of the partnership” and delivered the same to the defendant. He also alleged that he had taken possession of the equipment “lease, supplies and other property in the medical office operated by the defendant at Visalia”; had delivered the same to the defendant on June *696 12, 1950, after making an inventory thereof; and that the defendant accepted and used the same but had made no payment on account thereof. In this report the lease of the Visalia office was specifically described. It was stated that the defendant had collected rentals from a subtenant. Also, that there had been no decision on the merits as to whether the property in the Visalia office, the lease, or the rental from the subtenant were partnership property.

After a hearing on this report the trial court made findings of fact together with an order dated June 29, 1953, resulting in the following adjudications:

(1) Modified the order of June 30, 1950, by striking therefrom the provisions postponing, until a trial upon the merits, a determination of the amount to be paid to the partnership for the use or consumption of partnership property ;
(2) Required the defendant to pay the receiver the market value of the Fresno office supplies;
(3) Directed the defendant to deliver to the receiver all the equipment in the Fresno office together with a specified rental, or pay the receiver a specified market value therefor, with interest from June 12, 1950;
(4) Found that the allegations in the report of the receiver with respect to the Visalia office, with certain minor exceptions, were true; that the reasonable value of the equipment in that office was the sum of $1,992.67; that the reasonable value of the consumed supplies was $944.18; and that the defendant had collected rental for the period of March 15, 1950, to June 12, 1950, in the sum of $362.50, and declared that the court reserved “jurisdiction to provide for the disposition” of the lease of this office, the rental collected by the defendant from the subtenant and of any property not disposed of by the current order, “or to charge or credit the reasonable rental value or the reasonable market value thereof on June 12, 1950, as found by this court, in its final decree on the merits in this action or by a further order in this receivership, as the court may deem proper.”

On appeal by the defendant the order of June 29, 1953, was affirmed by this court (Steinberg v. Goldstein, 129 Cal.App.2d 682 [278 P.2d 22]).

On October 24, 1955, the receiver filed a petition for further instructions with respect to the equipment, supplies, rental collected from the subtenant and the lease of the Visalia office.

After notice, there was a hearing upon this petition *697 in which all parties participated. The defendant contended that the partnership character of the property in question should not be determined in the receivership proceeding. With respect to this matter, the court made the following statement:

“Well, gentlemen, I am of the opinion that this court not only is not going to determine what is and what is not partnership assets but that to do so would be exceeding the power of this court in operating a receivership. ...”

Thereafter the court made its “order of instructions” and, amongst other things, decreed:

That the defendant deliver to the receiver the equipment in the Visalia office. (This property was specifically described, and its rental and market value, in the amounts previously determined, were set forth.)
That the defendant pay the receiver the rental accruing since June 12, 1950, for the use of said equipment.
That, in lieu of delivering the equipment to the receiver and paying the rental in question, the defendant, at his option, may pay to the receiver the market value thereof.
That the defendant pay to the receiver the market value of the consumed supplies, and the $362.50 rental collected from the subtenant.
That at such time as the defendant had “done and performed the things required of him by this order” the receiver was authorized to assign to him the lease of the Visalia office, provided he executed an agreement assuming its obligations and indemnifying the receiver and the plaintiff against loss, otherwise the lease is to be sold.

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Related

Hankin v. Hankin
420 A.2d 1090 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1980)
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177 Cal. App. 2d 720 (California Court of Appeal, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
303 P.2d 80, 145 Cal. App. 2d 692, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinberg-v-goldstein-calctapp-1956.