Tallman v. Smith

148 P.2d 581, 112 Colo. 217, 1944 Colo. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 10, 1944
DocketNo. 15,107.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 581 (Tallman v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tallman v. Smith, 148 P.2d 581, 112 Colo. 217, 1944 Colo. LEXIS 162 (Colo. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bakke

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted by plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, to whom we hereinafter refer as Mrs. Tall-man, asking for a declaratory judgment, determining her rights under a contract which she had entered into with her nephew-in-law, defendant in error Smith. The contract involved the sale of an interest in a hardware and implement store in the town of Center, which store Mrs. Tallman had owned and operated since the death of her husband in 1918. The other defendant in error, Lewis, is a party by virtue of his having purchased an interest in the property on January 1, 1932. The trial court ruled adversely to Mrs. Tallman and she seeks reversal on a writ of error.

The contract recites that Mrs. Tallman is party of the first part and Sam Smith is party of the second part; that Mrs. Tallman is the owner of the business; that she wishes to retire and “desires to eventually sell and dispose of the whole of said property.” The parties then agree in substance: 1. That the present value is $32,345.00, and that the said net value of the bills and accounts receivable amount to $9,957.54. 2. That Mrs. Tallman agrees to sell, and does sell, to Sam Smith an undivided one-fourth interest for $8,086.25 which consideration Smith agrees to pay “in manner and form” in substance as follows: One note for $5,596.86 payable on or before five years from date with interest payable annually at seven per cent, and another note for $2,489.38 on the same terms. 3. That Mrs. Tallman agrees to sell to the second party a further two-fourths interest on the terms that when Smith has paid the full amount of the two notes for the first one-fourth interest, together with the interest thereon, then the value of the business “shall be ascertained by inventory,” and Smith shall pay Mrs. Tallman one-fourth of such ascertained *220 value by giving her a note for that amount payable on or before four years after date thereof, with interest at seven per cent per annum; that when that note is paid Mrs. Tallman agrees to sell to Smith a third one-fourth interest in like manner for a note to mature in three years from date thereof, which Smith “shall” give Mrs. Tallman. 4. That Smith agrees to take charge of the business at once and manage the same, receiving for such services a salary of $150.00 a month, payable from the proceeds of the business. 5. That the remaining one-fourth interest shall belong to Smith when he shall have paid for the three-fourths agreed to be purchased by him, without further payment for the last one-fourth interest; that if Smith dies or refuses to continue operations under the contract before he pays the full price for the three-fourths interest, he shall own that part of the last quarter interest in proportion to the amount he has paid on the other three-fourths, provided that from May 19, 1927, Smith shall receive the income “from said one-fourth interest in the business.” 6. If the parties can and do sell the business, Mrs. Tallman is to receive the unpaid portion of the purchase price of the three-fourths interest and the remainder of the selling price shall belong to Smith. In the event of such sale, Mrs. Tallman’s interest to “be determined by inventory,” and Smith may sell that interest at any time for the “inventory price.” 7. The goods to be insured against loss by fire. 8. Mrs. Tallman agrees to lease an adjoining building to Smith for the life of the contract and Smith shall “have an option” to lease for another five year period. 9. Smith agrees to “cause an inventory of the stock to be taken” each year and give Mrs. Tallman a complete statement showing the condition of the business at the end of each year. 10. Smith may decrease the stock by sale thereof, and dividends from such sale and of net profits may be made by mutual agreement. A supplement to the agreement permitted purchase by Smith of some additional lots for partnership purposes for “Fifty *221 dollars, for each one-fourth interest and paid for as he pays for additional interests in the business,” and finally the contract of sale between Smith and Lewis (to whom Smith sold a one-fourth interest January 1, 1932) for $7,690 which Mrs. Tallman approved.

The record discloses that the parties proceeded under the contract without serious question or dispute for thirteen years. Smith took immediate charge in 1927 and apparently did a good job of running the business. Mrs. Tallman admits she “retired from the business.” An inventory was taken and statements showing the condition of the business were furnished to Mrs. Tall-man at the beginning of each year. Nothing in the record indicates that she ever objected to the manner in which the inventory was taken or to the statements that were furnished her. They were used by her and the partnership year after year as a basis for the computation of the respective income taxes.

As to the first quarter-interest which Smith purchased in 1927, a credit was allowed him of some $1,800. As to this adjustment Smith testified as follows: “Q. What was the occasion for that credit? A. Well as Mrs. Tail-man said, we just kind of stepped it off when I went in there [May 19, 1927], and after the year’s business was finished and invoiced and we added it all up, I saw that we had made a mistake some way, so I called her attention to it then and we estimated how much the business had actually made in 1927, and we proportioned the amount of profits up to the time I went in there and we allowed that and arrived at the net value of the business that way, so I called her attention to it and she gave me a credit on the notes.”

As to the amount given for the second quarter-interest and the method used in ascertaining it, Mrs. Tallman testified as follows: “Q. Mrs. Tallman, when Smith gave you these notes in 1930 in January for the second one-fourth interest in the business, that amount was arrived at from a statement similar to the ones that had *222 been given you each year which showed a statement of the assets and liabilities of the business? A. Yes sir. Q. It was similar to the one which he gave you in 1940 for the 1939 business, wasn’t it, a statement of the assets and liabilities? A. Yes sir. Q. At that time he had taken an inventory and had made out a statement which showed what the business was worth, and gave you two notes which aggregated one-fourth of the net value of the business? Á. Yes sir.”

After Lewis became a partner in 1932 he received one-fourth of the money divided as profits; Mrs. Tallman received one-fourth, and Smith two-fourths. This method of division was followed until December 7, 1939, and Mrs. Tallman was always present when these divisions were made, which indicates that Smith’s interest in the profits was in each instance determined as he gave the notes for the next quarter interest and not from the time the notes were paid.

December 7, 1939, Smith paid Mrs. Tallman the balance of the purchase price for the second one-fourth interest after stating to her that when he gave her the notes for the purchase price of the' third one-fourth interest in the business she would have no further interest therein.

January 3, 1940, Mrs. Tallman advised Smith that his option to purchase the third one-fourth interest and the gift of the fourth had been revoked and cancelled.

January 11, 1940, Smith wrote Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 581, 112 Colo. 217, 1944 Colo. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tallman-v-smith-colo-1944.