White v. White

326 P.2d 306, 183 Kan. 162, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 7, 1958
Docket40,841
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 326 P.2d 306 (White v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. White, 326 P.2d 306, 183 Kan. 162, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 340 (kan 1958).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, C. J.:

This was an action between son (Kenneth R. White) and father (Fred White) for the dissolution of an alleged partnership. After a full and complete trial, submitted solely on the issue of partnership by stipulation, the district court found that the defendant father was the sole and separate owner of the involved business, that no partnership business had ever been carried on between the plaintiff son and the defendant and rendered judgment accordingly. The plaintiff appeals from that judgment.

The pleadings are not in question and for that reason require little attention.

It suffices to say that, for purposes here involved, the petition alleges that plaintiff had worked at the father’s place of business continuously after 1920; that on August 1,-1936, plaintiff and defendant entered into an oral partnership arrangement; that subsequently and on February 4, 1938, such parties reduced part of their partnership arrangement to writing, and contains extended recitals setting forth plaintiff’s version of the relationship existing between the parties under and by virtue of the alleged agreements.

All that need be said respecting the answer, which was duly verified, is that it denies the existence of any partnership arrangement whatsoever and, by other allegations, joins issue on all claims made by the plaintiff in the petition respecting the creation of any such business relationship by either oral or written agreement.

At the close of a spirited trial the court, as the parties had previously stipulated, proceeded to determine the sole issue submitted on the basis of findings of fact and conclusions of law determinative *164 of whether or not plaintiff and defendant were partners. Such findings and conclusions are so comprehensive and in such form that they can be used to serve the dual purpose of giving a bird’s-eye view of the complicated factual picture, disclosed by a long and tedious record, as well as the trial court’s version of the essential facts established by the evidence and for that reason should be quoted at length. They read:

“Findings of Fact
"1. Fred White, the defendant, is 82 years of age. He has been a resident of Mitchell County, Kansas, for more than fifty years last past.
“Kenneth B. White, the plaintiff, is 54 years of age, and has been a resident of Mitchell County, Kansas, throughout his life.
“2. The defendant is now, and has been engaged in the business of merchandising hides, furs, wool, and reclaimed metals for some forty years last past.
“3. The plaintiff worked with his father in said business from about the year 1920 until on or about April 6, 1956.
“4. During the course of plaintiff’s working in said business he was authorized and did draw checks on defendant’s account in The First National Bank of Beloit, Kansas, for many years last past. The plaintiff drew checks on said account to pay his personal living expenses and to acquire motor vehicles as his personal property. The plaintiff drew a check on said account for the purchase ot his residential property in Beloit, Kansas.
“5. During the year 1937 and subsequent years the plaintiff was the owner of a pickup truck which was used incident to the plaintiff carrying on his duties in said business. The pickup truck was purchased by the plaintiff drawing a check on the defendant’s bank account. Title thereto was taken in the name of the plaintiff.
“6. The defendant applied to the corporation commission of the State of Kansas for a private carrier permit late in the year 1937 or early in the year of 1938. A private carrier permit was granted on defendant’s application in the name of Fred White and Son. The application was made under the style of Fred White and Son.
“7. The corporation commission required the filing of a partnership agreement as a prerequisite to granting such permit.
“8. A document was executed in the year 1938 by Fred White and Kenneth B. White, a jurat was appended thereto, which James Reiter signed as a Notary Public. The document purports to be a partnership agreement as to ownership of business property and as to sharing of profits and losses, on a fifty-fifty basis as expressed in the document. This document is designated plaintiff’s Exhibit A. Other documents executed by Fred White and Kenneth B. White, in connection with the application for a private carrier permit are designated plaintiff’s exhibit B and plaintiff’s exhibit C.
“9. The plaintiff, Kenneth B. White, did exercise certain prerogatives of an active partner, such as authority over direction and control of business activities, including drawing of checks on the business bank account to pay business obligations and to meet his personal obligations and living expenses. These *165 prerogatives were exercised as a trusted employee of Fred White. Kenneth B. White was acting in a supervisory capacity, and exercised certain control over fellow employees. The withdrawing of funds from the business bank account for his personal use was the method used in compensating him as employee of Fred White.
“10. The defendant used, for many years, the trade name of ‘Fred White and Son,’ and possibly other versions of trade names, which use, standing alone, indicated a partnership to the extent, perhaps, and under such circumstances as might have estopped him from denying a partnership as to third parties relying upon a partnership.
“11. The circumstances relating to the application for, and securing of, the private carrier permit indicate that the sole purpose of the purported partnership agreement was to secure such permit. The application being made in the trade name, die practice of rather loose unconventional methods of doing business, the seeking of inexpert advice and assistance in connection therewith, (a real estate agent, Ed Reiter) caused the defendant and plaintiff to seek the easy solution to the permit problem, in complying with the commission’s request for a partnership agreement, rather than starting over and making the application reflect the true facts.
“12. For several years the business did not prosper. It did prosper for some years after 1938. The defendant owed obligations which were never paid. Defendant’s farm was foreclosed and later repurchased from the Federal Land Bank on an installment contract. The plaintiff worked diligently, long hours with but slight and inadequate compensation. He negotiated a loan from one Goldstein, a wool and junk metal buyer at Manhattan, Kansas, for the purpose of keeping the business from imminent failure. His efforts showed unusual devotion as an employee, even for a son of an employer. They do not, however, in view of all the circumstances surrounding the conduct of the business over many years lead to the conclusion that a partnership existed or was consummated, first in a purported oral agreement, or later by the purported written partnership agreement, plaintiff’s exhibit A.
“13.

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Bluebook (online)
326 P.2d 306, 183 Kan. 162, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-white-kan-1958.