Thibaut v. Thibaut

607 So. 2d 587, 1992 WL 163402
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1992
Docket90 CA 0904, 90 CA 0905, 91 CA 0732
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 607 So. 2d 587 (Thibaut v. Thibaut) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thibaut v. Thibaut, 607 So. 2d 587, 1992 WL 163402 (La. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

607 So.2d 587 (1992)

James H. THIBAUT, Margaret Thibaut Watson, Mary Elizabeth Thibaut Rives, the Constance Elizabeth Thibaut Trust, the Sally Clarice Thibaut Trust, Alma Louise Thibaut Trust, and the David D. Thibaut, Jr. Trust
v.
Thomas A. THIBAUT, Michael Smith, III, Eugenia Smith Mueller, Jane Thibaut Boyce, John E. Thibaut, Thibaut, Inc., Thibaut Oil Company, Inc. and Thibaut Oil Company.

Nos. 90 CA 0904, 90 CA 0905, 91 CA 0732.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 29, 1992.
Rehearing Denied December 9, 1992.
Writ Denied February 11, 1993.

*590 William H. Reinhardt, Jr., Jeanne-Marie Zeringue, Metairie, Alfred Landry, New Iberia, Vincent Sotile, Talbot, Sotile, Carmouche, Marchand & Marcello, Donaldsonville, for plaintiffs.

*591 Duncan M. Smith, Jr., Lafayette, for Mary T. Rives.

Michael Rubin, Baton Rouge, for defendants.

H. Alston Johnson, III, Baton Rouge, for John E. Thibaut, Jane T. Boyce.

Lew Anne Lester Greco, James C. Percy, Baton Rouge, for Thibaut Oil Co. in Liquidation.

Before LOTTINGER, EDWARDS and GONZALES, JJ.

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a commercial dispute arising out of the liquidation of a family owned petroleum distributorship. This action commenced as a suit for an accounting in a partnership, damages for trade name infringement, damages for unfair trade practices, damages in tort, and preliminary and permanent injunctions. The original plaintiffs are James H. Thibaut, Margaret Thibaut Watson, Mary Elizabeth Thibaut Rives, the Constance Elizabeth Thibaut Trust, the Sally Clarice Thibaut Trust, the Alma Louise Thibaut Trust, and the David D. Thibaut, Jr. Trust, hereinafter collectively referred to as the James Group or the plaintiff partners. The defendants are Thomas A. Thibaut, F. Michael Smith, III, Eugenia Smith Mueller, Jane Thibaut Boyce, John E. Thibaut, Thibaut, Inc., and Thibaut Oil Company, Inc., hereinafter collectively referred to as the Thomas Group. Thibaut Oil Company Partnership was also named originally as a defendant. Of this group, the following defendants will be collectively referred to as the Boyce Group— Jane Thibaut Boyce, John E. Thibaut, and Thibaut, Inc.

Three appeals by the defendants are currently pending before this court. From a judgment dismissing the defendants' reconventional demand, defendants have filed appeal—CA 90 0905. From a judgment on the merits in favor of the plaintiffs, the defendants have taken a second appeal— CA 90 0904. The third appeal, CA 91 0732, is from an adverse judgment setting attorneys' and expert witness fees. These three appeals have been consolidated by this court for judicial efficiency.

FACTS

Thibaut Oil Company, the partnership, is an ordinary Louisiana partnership organized under an unrecorded Agreement of Partnership dated February 2, 1942. The Agreement of Partnership was amended by Agreement of Compromise and Settlement dated August 26, 1966. The Agreement of Partnership provides for three methods of termination: (1) unanimous consent of the partners, (2) written concurrence of the partners who own at least two-thirds of the total partnership interest, or (3) written notice by the partner wishing to terminate it one year in advance of its fiscal closing.

In a letter dated December 29, 1983, the James Group gave notice of its intent to terminate the partnership to the principal office of the partnership. The James Group collectively owned 50% of the partnership.[1] The James Group failed to specify which of the three methods of termination it intended to use. By letter dated December 30, 1983, Thomas A. Thibaut, a 15% partner, gave notice of his intent to terminate the partnership. The language contained in this letter evidences Thomas A. Thibaut's intent to utilize the third method of termination listed above—"one year's notice" method.

After these notices were given, the James Group began negotiating with the attorney for the Thomas Group in an effort either to resolve the problems affecting the partnership or to reach an agreement for the orderly dissolution of the partnership. These negotiations were never formally broken off. In October 1984, the remaining members of the Thomas Group making up the remaining 35% ownership of the *592 partnership[2] served written notice on the partnership of its intent to terminate the partnership. The James Group had arranged for an audit to be performed and were awaiting the final draft of the audit when certain events transpired. The James Group alleges that it lacked any knowledge of these events prior to their occurrence.

On October 15, 1984, the Thomas Group filed a petition for liquidation of the partnership. In this petition, it alleged that Thomas A. Thibaut, as managing partner of the Thibaut Oil Company, had received written notice from all partners of their intent to terminate the partnership thereby meeting the unanimous consent requirement for termination. In support of this allegation, the Thomas Group attached the James Group's letter dated December 29, 1983, as well as letters from the defendant partners[3]. Prior to the October 15, 1984 petition for liquidation, the Thomas Group and the James Group each had formed a separate "shelf" corporation.[4] Each group contemplated the demise of the partnership and anticipated the continuation of the business of the partnership in the form of a corporation.

In late August or early September, 1984, while the audit was still ongoing, the defendants conducted secret meetings in which to devise their plan to take over the partnership's business upon dissolution of the partnership. The effective implementation of their plan required that certain actions be undertaken by the defendants to put Thibaut Oil Company, Inc. in a position to take over the business of the partnership on the day that the petition for liquidation was filed. As part of its initial plan, the Thomas Group contacted Shell Oil Company about a jobber contract. Thomas Thibaut contacted a friend and business associate, Hartman, to obtain a location for his new distributorship and proceeded to fence in a lot, put up a shed, an office, storage tanks, piping, and pumps at the Hartman location in Sunshine Industrial Park. The defendants wrote checks on their personal accounts to buy various equipment to use in their new distributorship. The intent was that this equipment belong to the Thibaut Oil Company, Inc.

Furthermore, as part of their scheme to secretly take over the partnership, the Thomas Group, on September 27, 1984, arranged for the partnership to sell a 30,000 gallon capacity propane tank to Churchill and Thibaut, Inc. for use by it as an anhydrous ammonia tank. The September sale was made at an unusual time considering the fact that the anhydrous ammonia season does not begin until March. Churchill and Thibaut, Inc. in turned leased the propane tank that it had purchased from the partnership to the new corporation.

The plaintiffs' petition alleges that on the same day on which the petition for liquidation was filed, October 15, 1984, Thomas A. Thibaut mailed a letter to all partners of the partnership announcing:

As of this day I have received formal notices from all partners comprising the Thibaut Oil Company partnership informing me of their unanimous desire to terminate the partnership. I have, therefore, upon advice of counsel and in accordance with the law, petitioned the court to appoint Arthur A. Lemann, Jr. to liquidate and distribute the assets of the Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
607 So. 2d 587, 1992 WL 163402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibaut-v-thibaut-lactapp-1992.