Walter B. Waldie, III v. Frank Cross

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1995
Docket10-94-00151-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Walter B. Waldie, III v. Frank Cross (Walter B. Waldie, III v. Frank Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter B. Waldie, III v. Frank Cross, (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Waldie et al v. Cross

[WITHDRAWN 8-30-95]



IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-94-151-CV


     WALTER B. WALDIE, III, ET AL.,

                                                                                              Appellants

     v.


     FRANK CROSS, ET AL.,

                                                                                              Appellees


From the 95th District Court

Dallas County, Texas

Trial Court # 88-15277-D


O P I N I O N


      This is a partnership dissolution case. Cross, Waldie, and Durtschi are all court reporters who formed a partnership under a written partnership agreement dated June 28, 1983. Sometime after the formation of the partnership, Cross, Waldie, and Durtschi each formed a corporation, respectively named Frank Cross, Inc., Walter B. Waldie III, Inc., and Durtschi, Inc., and a new partnership agreement was drawn up to reflect the corporate entities as partners in the partnership. All parties admitted that the only reason for incorporation was for tax purposes. The new partnership agreement, however, was never signed and executed. Be that as it may, as of January 1, 1984, Cross, Waldie, and Durtschi each considered themselves equal partners in the partnership.

      By March 1984, Cross had noticed a morale problem in the office. Several of the court reporters at the partnership office were making statements about Waldie's wife, Martha, who worked there; and Cross spoke with Durtschi who agreed that there existed a morale problem in the office caused by Martha. The three partners then met a few days later and agreed that Martha's job duties would be phased out so that she would ultimately be terminated from work in the office. Through the remainder of 1984, it was apparent that Martha's duties were not being phased out and on several occasions Cross questioned Waldie when he was going to get rid of Martha from the office; whereupon Waldie replied that he was going to phase out her duties. In December 1984, Cross met with Waldie and insisted that Waldie's wife no longer work in the office. Waldie's response was, in effect, that "the partnership is over."

      Trial was had to a jury which, in effect, found:

1.The date the partnership of Cross, Waldie, and Durtschi dissolved was March 5, 1985.

2.Plaintiffs (Frank Cross and Frank Cross, Inc.) exercised due diligence in obtaining issuance and service of citation on Walter Waldie and Charles Durtschi,

3.The fair market value of Frank Cross, Inc.'s one-third ownership interest in the Cross, Waldie, and Durtschi partnership on March 5, 1985, was $63,759.

4.The total amount of profit derived by Walter Waldie, Charles Durtschi, or their respective corporations, from the use of Cross, Waldie, and Durtschi's partnership property after March 5, 1985, was $148,000.

5.Both Walter B. Waldie III, Inc. and Charles Durtschi, Inc. failed to comply with the partnership agreement.

6.The actual damages incurred by Frank Cross, Inc. as a result of Walter B. Waldie III, Inc.'s failure to comply with the partnership agreement was $31,879.50. The actual damages incurred by Frank Cross, Inc. as a result of Charles Durtschi, Inc.'s failure to comply with the partnership agreement was also $31,879.50

7.Walter B. Waldie III knowingly failed to account to Frank Cross, Inc. for its partnership interest. Charles Durtschi knowingly failed to account to Frank Cross, Inc. for its partnership interest.

8.The sum of money which should be assessed against Walter B. Waldie III as actual damages for failing to account to Frank Cross, Inc. for its partnership interest is $31,879.50. The sum of money which should be assessed against Charles Durtschi as actual damages for failing to account to Frank Cross, Inc. for its partnership interest is $31,879.50.

9.The jury failed to find that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover any exemplary damages from the defendants.

      10. A reasonable fee for the necessary services of plaintiffs' attorney in this case is as follows:

                  a.For preparation and trial$24,000

                  b.For an appeal to the court of appealsZero

                  c.For making or responding to an application for writ of

error to the Supreme Court of TexasZero

                  d.If application for writ of error is granted by the

Supreme Court of TexasZero

11.Walter B. Waldie III, Inc. was the alter ego of Walter B. Waldie III individually.

12.Charles Durtschi, Inc. was the alter ego of Charles Durtschi individually.

13.The jury failed to find that the plaintiff (Cross) had been guilty of laches in asserting its rights under the partnership agreement or in filing the lawsuit.

      After the jury verdict, the trial court entered its judgment as follows:

(1) That plaintiffs Frank Cross and Frank Cross, Inc. recover from all four defendants jointly and severally the amount of $113,092.33 as actual damages.

(2) That plaintiffs recover from all four defendants jointly and severally the amount of $24,000 as reasonable and necessary attorney's fees for trial of this case.

(3) That plaintiffs recover from all four defendants jointly and severally prejudgment interest of 10% per annum, compounded annually, on the actual damages from March 5, 1985, until the date the judgment was signed, plus costs of court, plus post-judgment interest on all damages, costs , and attorney's fees at 10% per annum, beginning on the date following the signing of the judgment, until said judgment is fully satisfied. It was further ordered that the defendants take nothing on their counterclaims against plaintiffs. Likewise, defendants were denied any recovery of attorneys' fees in the event of appeal to the court of appeals or to the Supreme Court of Texas.

      Defendant-Appellants Walter B. Waldie III, Charles Durtschi, Walter B. Waldie III, Inc., and Durtschi, Inc. come to this court on twenty-three points of error. Plaintiff-Appellees Frank Cross and Frank Cross, Inc. assert two cross-points of error.

      

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