West v. West

403 P.2d 22, 16 Utah 2d 411, 1965 Utah LEXIS 572
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1965
Docket10251
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 403 P.2d 22 (West v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. West, 403 P.2d 22, 16 Utah 2d 411, 1965 Utah LEXIS 572 (Utah 1965).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

Plaintiff Rulon R. West appeals this case for the second time, 1 seeking to reverse a judgment against him awarding his son Terry 40%, and his wife Flora 20%, of the assets of a family partnership by whicli they owned and operated El Rancho Motel at Murray, Utah amounting to $114,820.75. Defendants Terry and Flora cross-appeal from part of the judgment ordering that several advancements to the partnership by the plaintiff, totaling $29,645.39, after a certain date, be regarded as loans to the partnership and repaid in full to the plaintiff.

The pivotal problem in this case is. whether the father, Rulon R. West, in initiating the family enterprise and investing money in the motel referred to, made gifts, to his said wife and son in the proportionate shares mentioned above. The first appeal was from a summary judgment in which the trial court so ruled based principally upon documentary evidence. In that decision we indicated that upon a consideration of such evidence in the light of the .circumstances shown there was sufficient uncertainty as to the intent of the parties-that the plaintiff should be afforded a trial and opportunity to present evidence. Accordingly the cause was remanded for that purpose. Pursuant to that remand and trial of the issues the judgment appealed from' was entered.

The background facts are set forth in our prior decision. We recite herein only such evidence as seems essential to con- *413 sideratio'n of the issues treated on this appeal. It was in 1957 that Rulon R. West advanced $47,500 as down payment on the El- Rancho Motel and $1,000 to be used as working capital. The son Terry ¿greed to leave other interests and devote full time to this business. The general purport of the arrangement appears to have been that the • partners should participate in the enterprise, in the, proportions of Ru-lon R. West, 40%', Terry R. West, 40%, and Flora E. West, 20%. The partnership agreement provided that the net profits should be so divided between the partners; that the partners should in like proportion bear all losses including capital; and it further provided that if the partnership should terminate, then the assets should be distributed in those proportions.

The business did not prosper and it was necessary for the father, Rulon, to make further advances of money from time to time between 1957 and 1960 until approximately $150,000 had been invested. Finally, early in 1960 it was decided to sell out and discontinue the partnership. In April 1960 a dissolution agreement and a supplement thereto were executed. As a result of disagreement over-the division of the assets of the partnership plaintiff filed this action. Inasmuch as this-is a suit over an accounting in a partnership, it is a suit in equity and it is the responsibility of this court to review questions of both law and fact. 2 But we do so generally, in the light most favorable to the findings of the trial court, and reverse only if the evidence or lack of it renders it clearly necessary to do so. 3

Plaintiff contends that the moneys he advanced were in effect loans to the partnership which should be repaid to him before distribution of the assets; whereas, the defendants argue that his advancements were outright gifts to the family enterprise and that upon dissolution the assets should be distributed in the proportions stated. Plaintiff places reliance on the proposition that his contributions were set upon the books of the partnership as capital and that under Sec. 48-1-37(2) (c) U.C.A. 1953 capital is a liability, that is, a debt payable by the partnership; and upon the further provision of the Uniform Partnership Act, Sec. 48-1-15(1) U.C.A.1953 that, “each partner shall be repaid his contributions * * * by way of capital * '* * to the partnership properties.” We agree that ordinarily, upon dissolution of a partnership, the distribution of capital should be- in the same proportion as it was paid in by the partners; 4 . and thus Rulon’s con *414 tributions would be payable to him as liabilities of the partnership before the net assets would be distributed in the proportions stated. However, as stated in Sec. 48-1-15 and 37 U.C.A.1953, the rules just stated are all “subject to any agreement” among the partners. Whether there was such here is the inquiry of moment.

It must be conceded that the evidence as to whether the father, Rulon West, intended an outright gift of 40% interest to his son, Terry, and 20% interest to his wife, Flora, in this enterprise at its inception leaves a great deal to be desired. There was testimony that no mention was made of such a gift to the defendants at that time. The principal evidence relied upon by them is the testimony of Terry himself. He stated that in a conversation with his father about two weeks before the articles of partnership were signed, his father made the statement:

“Assuming we sold it for book value, * * * there would be approximately $150,000 to be distributed, and I [Terry] would receive 40% of that sum, which would be tax free.
‡ * í]í ❖
“He [plaintiff] told me * * * that he would like to have, in the Partnership Agreement, a statement that where, upon his death, that, automatically, I would be distributed part of his capital; and I told him, T wasn’t so worried about what would happen upon your death as how worried I am as, after I changed my future plans in accounting and engineering, if I come out here, and for one reason or another, this thing is a flop.’
“He says, ‘This is no problem because we can have another arrangement in the Partnership Agreement, whereby, upon a dissolution, you will be protected there, too.’

But it is significant that the Articles of Partnership were made up and signed after the above statement allegedly was made and they do not contain any clear expression of such intent. In fact, the Articles, together with the bookkeeping procedures, kept by Terry himself, which set up Ru-lon’s contributions in the capital account, could fairly be interpreted as showing the intent that plaintiff’s contributions were to be regarded as debts of the partnership, which would have to be repaid before distribution of the net assets to the partners.

The important and controlling aspect of this case is that the evidence as to what took place at the time it was decided to discontinue and liquidate leaves very little room for doubt or uncertainty that the father, Rulon R. West, intended at that time to make a gift to the defendants of the stated proportions of the enterprise. The dissolution agreement executed April 2, 1962, referred to the distribution in the proportions of Rulon R. West, 40%, Terry *415 R. West, 40%, and Flora E. West, 20%; and the supplement to that agreement recites in paragraph 1:

“The contribution made by Rulon R. West with respect to the 40% interest acquired by Terry R. West, was and is a gift from Rulon R. West to Terry R. West * * * ”

and further in paragraph 3 :

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Bluebook (online)
403 P.2d 22, 16 Utah 2d 411, 1965 Utah LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-west-utah-1965.