Cathy M. FROST, Appellant/Cross-Appellee, v. John S. SPENCER, Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
Nos. S-12377, S-12587
Supreme Court of Alaska
Oct. 16, 2009.
Accordingly, we affirm the superior court‘s May 2008 denial of Richard‘s motion for return of funds.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the superior court‘s decisions in all respects in both appeals.
OPINION
PER CURIAM.
I. INTRODUCTION
Cathy Frost and John Spencer, friends who were at times romantically involved, ran a business together from the late 1980s to the early 2000s. When their working relationship deteriorated, Spencer sued for division of the partnership property under the law of domestic relations. Frost agreed to a dissolution of their business partnership under a framework for the “equitable distribution” of assets and liabilities. But after trial the superior court declared that it was bound instead to resolve the case under partnership law. The court permitted the parties to submit written responses to its ruling but declined to hold another evidentiary hearing before issuing a final decision. Frost appeals on several grounds. Because Frost should have had the opportunity to present evidence after the court announced that different law governed the case, we reverse the superior court‘s denial of Frost‘s request for a supplemental evidentiary hearing and remand for further proceedings.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Cathy Frost and John Spencer, friends since high school, started a business together in 1988 or 1989. That business, called Footloose Alaska, initially provided guided hunting expeditions and then expanded to offer catered events, including weddings. Frost and Spencer acquired real property in Girdwood, the Raven Glacier Lodge, as a location to house clients before flying them to remote areas for hunting trips and for use as the site of their catered events. That property was titled in Spencer‘s name because of residual financial complications from a prior business in whiсh Frost had been a partner with her deceased husband, but the parties agree that they purchased the lodge together. Frost and Spencer also purchased Farewell Lake Lodge from Frost‘s parents. The two partners had different roles in running Footloose Alaska: Spencer “did all the flying and bush logistics and guiding, the carpentry, architectural work, landscaping, aircraft repair and maintenance,” and Frost “did the marketing, the food service, [and] the public relations.” The record does not indicate that they had a written partnership agreement.
Before and at the beginning of the business partnership, Frost and Spencer were “sporadically” romantically involved. There is no evidence in the record, nor does either party now assert, that they ever lived together.
By 2003 Frost and Spencer no longer had a functioning professional relationship.1 In February 2005 Spencer filed a complaint against Frost requesting a “dissolution of the parties’ partnership interests” and a “division of their jointly acquired real and personal properties.” The complaint stated that “in 1985, the parties entered into a personal relationship and during the course of same, acquired, as partners, real property, personalty and incurred certain indebtedness,” but now “[t]he parties’ personal relationship has terminated.” In response, the superior court served the parties with a domestic relations procedural order. The case proceeded as though it concerned a domestic partnership, at first because the court apparently thought Spencer had properly characterized it as such,2 and later because the parties agreed to treat it as some kind of domestic relations case even after the court recognized the error. That agreement was explicit: during trial, Spencer‘s attorney noted on the record
In May 2006, after preliminary proceedings largely regarding the liability insuranсe on and possession and maintenance of Raven Glacier Lodge, the case went to trial. The court informed the parties that each side would have three hours and forty-five minutes total to present its case. As the case progressed, the court clerk kept track of time, and at several breaks the court reported to the parties how many of their allotted minutes they had used. Frost made motions for more time during and after the trial, which the superior court denied, and at other points Frost and her attorney noted that the time was insufficient to present all the evidence they wanted to put before the court.
Spencer served as the main witness on his own behalf. After answering preliminary questions about his personal background, he described the acquisition and maintenance of several planes that he believed were his property but Frost argued were partnership assets. He answered questions about the purchase of the real property Footloose Alaska used, as well as loans he and Frost had received from the bank and family members to begin the business. He also testified to small expenditures he had made out of personal funds for the benefit of Footloose Alaska. Frost‘s attorney asked Spencer on cross-examination about his work for the business, tax refunds he received in years Footloose Alaska lost money, and the status of the title to Raven Glacier Lodge.
Spencer‘s attorney called several additional witnesses. Four appraisers testified to the values of Farewell Lake Lodge, Raven Glacier Lodge, personalty at Raven Glacier Lodge, and airplanes Spencer owned while Footloose Alaska was in operation. David William Spencer, John Spencer‘s younger brother, testified that Spencer put significant effort into Footloose Alaska and that David had made loans totaling approximately $15,000 to Spencer and $25,000 to Footloose Alaska, none of which had been repaid.
Frost also put on witnesses. A seasonal employee at Raven Glacier Lodge testified about the amount of work Frost and Spencer put into Footloose Alaska while he worked there, describing the shifting focus of the business toward weddings rather than guiding hunts, as well as Spencer‘s decreasing involvеment in the early 2000s. Frost‘s mother took the stand to state that she and her husband had sold Farewell Lake Lodge to Frost and Spencer at a $270,000 discount and they considered that amount part of their daughter‘s inheritance. Frost also testified; she described financial benefits Spencer received from Footloose Alaska, such as money for repairs to his planes, and claimed to have invested her Permanent Fund Dividends into Footloose Alaska. She also talked about Spencer‘s decreasing involvement in the business. Her direct examination ended, though she stated that “wе have more witnesses” and “there‘s so much I haven‘t been able to say,” because her attorney decided to reserve the remaining ten minutes the court allotted to make a closing statement.
Frost‘s attorney argued in closing that the parties’ behavior—in particular, Spencer‘s benefiting financially from owning Footloose Alaska despite having ceased to contribute labor and Frost‘s continuing to work tirelessly to host weddings at the lodge—indicated that their arrangement was for Frost to work toward full ownership of Raven Glacier Lodge. Spencer‘s attorney spоke in closing about the values of the partnership property, arguing that certain personalty did not belong to the partnership, and about which party should retain possession of each item on his list.
Frost filed an objection to the court‘s decision, contesting the court‘s application of law, noting factual issues about which the court had not heard sufficient evidence, and requesting a supplemental evidentiary hearing. She argued that partnership law provided for her purchase of Spencer‘s interest in the business at its value on thе date of dissolution and that the court had not determined that date. She further argued that the law required establishing the value of each partner‘s capital contributions to the business rather than dividing the partnership assets; thus, there were various relevant but undeveloped facts, including personal loans Frost and Spencer took to gather funds for the business and Frost‘s contribution of her inheritance in the form of a discount in the purchase price for Farewell Lake Lodge. Spencer filed a response, arguing that the court needed only to find the assets and liabilities of the partnership, which it did, and noting that “defendant had ample time pre-trial and during the trial to develop her case.”
On July 12, 2006, the court made its previously announced decision final. The court rejected Frost‘s objection because neither party had “established by a preponderance of the evidence that there is anything different than a[n] equal partnership with respect to capital accounts,” and Frost had “failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there was a deflation in the purchase price of the Farewell Lake Lodge.”5
Frost moved for both reconsideration of the judgment and a new trial. The superior court denied both motions in December 2006.
Both parties appealed.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether the superior court erred in denying Frost‘s request for a supplemental evidentiary hearing. This is a question of law, which we review de novo.6
IV. DISCUSSION
The Court Abused Its Discretion in Denying a Supplemental Evidentiary Hearing.
Frost primarily argues in this appeal that the court‘s decision to resolve this case
Subsumed within Frost‘s due process claim is a claim that the superior court abused its discretion by applying unfair procedures. In recognition of our practice of reаching constitutional issues only when a case cannot be fairly decided on other grounds, we resolve this case on abuse of discretion rather than due process grounds.8
Basic procedural fairness requires notice and an opportunity for a hearing that is appropriate in light of the nature of the case.9 A hearing is necessary “to give the parties an opportunity to present the quantum of evidence needed [for the court] to make an informed and principled determination.”10 Although these principles are elements of procedural due process, the nonconstitutional abuse of discretion standard also encompasses them.11
It is clear from the record that the parties had agreed to resolve the case under domestic relations or domestic partnership law. The superior court allowed for written responses precisely because “the parties have looked at this and applied the law of domestic cohabitants.” Though the parties were permitted to and did submit written arguments before the court issued a final decision in the case, the court did not hold an additional еvidentiary hearing after the court‘s announcement of its tentative ruling. Because basic fairness requires an opportunity to present relevant evidence, applying an unanticipated body of law could be an abuse of discretion if doing so were to make different outcome-determinative facts relevant. To assess Frost‘s abuse of discretion claim, then, we inquire whether the court‘s application of business partnership law would, if announced at the outset of the trial, have reasonably led Frost to present different evidence or to place more emphasis on some of the evidence that she did present.
The laws of domestic partnership and business partnership are distinct. We decided in
Different rules govern winding up the affairs of a business partnership. In Frost and Spencer‘s case, the superior court apparently applied the now-repealed version of the Alaska Uniform Partnership Act16 (AUPA) and neither party has argued to this court that failing to apply the current version was error. To be consistent with the proceedings below and because the changes in the code do not impact the result here,17 we too rely on the former statutory text. We note, however, that the superior court should use the current AUPA upon issuing a new ruling as required by this opinion.18 Winding up a partnership involves liquidating assets to repay the partnership‘s debts and then distributing remaining funds, if any, to the dissociating partners according to the capital contributions and share of profits or losses.
When dissolution is caused in any way, except in contravention of the partnership agreement, each partner, as against the copartners and all persons claiming through them in respect of their interest in the partnership, unless otherwise agreed, may have the partnership property applied to discharge its liabilities, and the surplus applied to pay in cash the net amount owing to the respective partners.19
The AUPA further commanded that liabilities were to be discharged in the following order: “(A) those owing to creditors other than partners; (B) those owing to partners other than for capital and profits; (C) those owing to partners in respect of capital; (D) those owing to partners in respect of prof
Frost claims that if she had been given notice that this case would be tried as a business partnership dissolution, and if she had been given sufficient time, she would have presented evidence bearing on the partners’ capital contributions, advances, how profits were to be distributed, and the non-business partnership nature of some of the property that the court took into account. She states:
Had Ms. Frost been given proper notice of the legal standards that the trial court was going to aрply to her case, however, she would have been able to put on evidence of:
- The specific nature of the original partnership agreement with Spencer;
- How the partnership agreement was fundamentally amended when Ms. Frost‘s wedding business began at Raven Glacier Lodge;
- Ms. Frost‘s capital contributions in the form of foregoing her inheritance and in the form of monies generated by her own separate business activities;
- The business purposes of various items at the Raven Glacier Lodge (i.e. whether they were for the purposes of the partnership business or for separate purposes);
- Advances of partnership assets made to Spencer.
In our view Frost has made a plausible showing that if she had known before the trial that the case was to be decided under business partnership law principles, her evidentiary presentation would have been different. We conclude that the court abused its discretion in refusing to grant her request for an additional evidentiary hearing following the court‘s announcement that the case would be decided under business partnership principles.
On remand a supplemental evidentiary hearing should be held. Both parties should be given sufficient time to рresent evidence relevant to a business partnership dissolution considering the size and value of the partnership and the duration of its existence.
V. CONCLUSION
Because Frost‘s request for an additional evidentiary hearing should have been granted, we VACATE the superior court‘s judgment, including its findings of fact, and REMAND for further evidentiary proceedings.
MATTHEWS, Justice, with whom FABE, Chief Justice, joins, concurring.
EASTAUGH, Justice, concurring.
MATTHEWS, Justice, with whom FABE, Chief Justice, joins, concurring.
I agree with today‘s per curiam opinion. But I would hold that due process—in addition to the abuse of discretion standard—required a supplemental evidentiary hearing. I doubt that the principle that constitutional grounds should not be reached when a case may be decided on non-constitutional grounds should apply to this or other cases where the constitutional grounds supply the standard on which the non-constitutional grounds are based. Taken to extremes, application of the principle would mean that there would never be constitutionally based rulings where it could be said that the questioned conduct also amounted to a non-constitutional error subsumed in the constitutional standard.
EASTAUGH, Justice, concurring.
For all the reasons the per curiam opinion ably discussеs, I agree that a remand is necessary and that we do not need to reach Frost‘s due process arguments.
But I write separately because in my view it was an abuse of discretion not to grant Frost‘s Alaska Civil Rule 59(a) motion for a new trial. There may not seem to be much difference between a remand for a new trial and a remand for a further evidentiary hearing. Either way, as the court‘s opinion recognizes, the parties must have an adequate opportunity to offer evidence relevant to the legal principles that control the dispute. Perhaps it is only a mаtter of degree, but remanding for a new trial, rather than for an additional evidentiary hearing, helps emphasize that much of the evidence offered at the first trial may be irrelevant at the second, and that the parties will need to start over in marshaling and presenting the evidence relevant to the business partnership law applicable to their lawsuit. Remanding for “an additional hearing” might be taken as a suggestion that a supplemental hearing will do. In light of the rigorous time limits imposed on the parties at the first trial, an evidentiary hearing that merely supplements the evidence offered at the first trial may not give the parties enough time to try their case adequately. I therefore prefer to resolve the appeal in terms of the denial of Frost‘s motion for a new trial or a partial new trial.
NANCY J. HILLSTRAND, Appellant, v. CITY OF HOMER, Appellee.
No. S-13160.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
Oct. 30, 2009.
Notes
[S]ubject to any agreement between [partners], . . . (1) each partner shall be repaid the partner‘s contributions, whether by way of capital or advances to the partnership property, and shares equally in the profits and surplus remaining after all liabilities, including those to partners, are satisfied; and, except as provided in
AS 32.05.100(b) , shall contribute towards the losses, whether of capital or otherwise, sustained by the partnership according to the partner‘s share in the profits.
Former
