184 So. 2d 790 | La. Ct. App. | 1966
Lead Opinion
The surviving widow of Edese Hollier filed an opposition to the classification of Item 141 in the inventory of decedent’s estate, basing said opposition on the ground that it was community property acquired during the existence of their marriage community, and not the separate property of the decedent as classified in the inventory.
Item 141 consists of a 20% interest in the F. Hollier & Sons commercial partnership located in Ville Platte, Louisiana.
The case was originally submitted to the trial court solely on a stipulation of facts and the district court held that the contested property was community property. On appeal to this court, the district court’s judgment was affirmed in the decision entitled Succession of Hollier, 158 So.2d 351 (rehearing denied on December 20, 1963).
The Supreme Court of Louisiana granted a writ of certiorari, and in its decision entitled Succession of Hollier, 247 La. 384,
“Unlike the Court of Appeal, we are unable to determine from the stipulation and attached documents that an infusion of new capital into the partnership occurred during the second marriage of Edese Hollier. It is true that Article II of the 1953 Agreement recites that the ‘investment’ and ‘proportionate interest’ of Edese Hollier is $13,000.00 (20%). But, when the stipulation is considered as a whole, this recital is ambiguous and may refer to the prorated value of the assets of the former partnership transferred to the new partnership. The Administrator so interprets it in his brief to this Court. He asserts that no new capital was infused into the partnership.
“We cannot determine whether the successive partnership interests were merely ‘transformations’ of the previously existing interest or whether Edese Hollier infused community funds into the partnerships during his second marriage. The stipulation of counsel recognizes that the Court may require additional evidence to decide the issue presented. In this Court, the Administrator has requested a remand, if additional evidence is required. We have decided that the interests of justice require that the ■case be remanded to the district court for the taking of evidence relevant to the nature of the partnership interest in accordance with the . views that we have expressed.
“For the reasons assigned, the case is remanded to the Thirteenth Judicial District Court for Evangeline Parish for further proceedings consistent with the views herein expressed. All costs of this Court are to be paid by the respondent, Mrs. Dea Aucoin Hollier, and the taxing of all other costs is to await the final determination of the case.”
On remand to the district court, the books of the partnership and the testimony of Phillip Hollier, the managing partner, were introduced. From the evidence introduced, the district court found that the evidence failed to show an infusion of new capital and rendered judgment declaring Item 141 (decedent’s 20% interest in the partnership) to be the separate property of the deceased, Edese Hollier:
“This Court, as well as the Court of Ap■peal, held that Item 141 was in fact community property and rendered judgment in favor of opponent. However, writs of certiorari, or review, were granted by the Supreme Court and as a result of this that court held that the case should be remanded to ascertain whether there was an infusion of new capital by Edese Hollier into the partnership when it was last re-organized in 1953, and remanded the case to this court for additional evidence. The Supreme Court relied on the case of Kittredge v. Grau, 158 La. 154, 103 So. 723. On the order of remand the Court directed this court to take evidence relevant to the nature of the partnership interest in accordance with the views expressed in the Kittredge case. The evidence adduced on the trial on remand fails to indicate any new infusion of capital, and, therefore, this Court is now bound by the expression of the Supreme Court and therefore holds that the opposition by Dea. Aucoin should be dismissed.”
From said judgment of the district court the widow of the decedent has perfected this appeal .to this court.
It is our interpretation of the remand order that the Supreme Court ordered the district court to hear evidence in order to determine if the $13,000 that Edese Hollier had in the partnership, representing a 20% ownership, on January 2, 1953, represented a new cash investment or if the $13,000 represents the prorated value of the assets of the former partnership, transferred by decedent to the new partnership. Furthermore, it is our interpretation that the Supreme Court ordered that if the $13,000 representing the 20% ownership should be proven to have been transferred from the former partnership to the new partnership, then under the jurisprudence of Kittredge v. Grau, 158 La. 154, 103 So. 723, this amount must be ruled to be the separate property of the decedent, Edese Hol-lier.
The stipulation of facts was that in 1928 a commercial partnership known as “F. Hollier & Sons” was organized by oral agreement with Felix Hollier, Rene Hol-lier and the decedent as the sole partners. At that time the decedent was married to Mercedes Couvillion, who died in 1935. Decedent then acquired the partnership interests of the heirs of his marriage to Mercedes Couvillion and married Dea Au-coin in June, 1936. The stipulation does not reflect whether or not when the partnership was organized in 1936 Edese Hol-lier, the decedent, was as yet married to his second wife, Dea Aucoin.
Since the partnership was first created in 1928 it has been reorganized several times as to the number of partners and their interests in the partnership. In 1936, for instance, the deceased, Edese Hollier, owned a 74% interest, in 1947 a 47% interest, and in 1951 a 32% interest. On January 1, 1953, decedent’s partnership equity account is shown at 20%, which represented $13,000 in assets. When the partnership was reorganized and written instruments of partnership drawn on January 2, 1953, the decedent, Edese Hollier, was still shown as owning a 20% interest, representing a $13,000 investment in the partnership assets.
However, the evidence shows without contradiction that the successive transformations of Edese Hollier’s previously existing interests in the various succeeding partnerships at no time resulted from any infusion of new capital. In each instance his initial investment, represented initially by separate funds, was merely carried over or reduced in the succeeding partnership by book entry showing either a continuation or a decrease in his previous capital equity; in no case did the successive partnership interests result from any furnishing of new funds or from any new investment by Edese Hollier.
In so affirming the district court’s judgment declaring Item 141 to be the separate property of the decedent, we must note that it is our opinion that the district court correctly interpreted the remand order directed to it by the Supreme Court, and our opinion is based solely on the correct interpretation of the district court in so following said remand order.
The judgment of the district court is thus affirmed, costs of this appeal to be paid by the widow of Edese Hollier.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I cannot agree with the majority in its interpretation of the remand order of the Supreme Court or in its conclusions as to the facts which have been established.
In assigning reasons for remanding the case, the Supreme Court stated that it was unable to determine from the evidence “that an infusion of new capital into the partnership occurred during the second inar-
Upon remand of the case, the only evidence presented was the testimony of Phillip Hollier, the manager of F. Hollier & Sons, and the following documents: (1) Ledger sheets which purport to show the ownership and value of the “stock” in the partnership from and after January 1, 1947; (2) office copies of income tax returns of F. Hollier & Sons for the years 1936 to 1960, the originals of which purportedly were filed by that concern; and (3) a profit and loss statement of F. Hollier & Sons for the year 1961.
Phillip Hollier stated that he was unable to find any books or records of the partnership, other than office copies of its income tax returns, which purported to show the financial condition or ownership of the partnership prior to January 1, 1947. The community between the decedent and his second wife, of course, had been in existence for more than ten years before that date. The books or records which the witness was able to find consisted of two separate ledger books which purport to show the ownership of the “stock” in this unincorporated partnership. Photocopies of all of the pertinent pages of these two ledger books were filed in evidence. One set of these records shows the interests of the partners as of January 1, 1947, with a few entries purportedly being made on later dates extending to but not after 1953. The second set of ledger sheets, on forms entirely different from the first set, purports to show the interest of each partner as of January 1, 1953. Each sheet contains only one entry, showing the percentage of ownership and the value of the interest of one partner in the business as of that date. On two of the sheets in this last ledger, there appears a notation in the upper right corner bearing the date 1963, and showing a change in percentage of ownership, but no such change or explanation is made in the regular columns of the sheet. Also, I note that in the second set of ledger sheets the “James Hollier Estate” is listed as owning a 15 per cent interest in the partnership on January 1, 1953. The record shows that James Hollier died in 1957. These ledger sheets throw very little light on the nature of the partnership transactions, but I think they do indicate that a new partnership was formed in 1947, and that another and entirely different partnership, with new records, was formed in 1953.
The income tax returns which were introduced in evidence reflect that the interest which Edese Hollier owned in the business known as F. Hollier & Sons varied from time to time, just as we noted in our original opinion (158 So.2d 351). These returns also show, however, that the partnership earned a substantial profit each year, and that during several of those years the portion of the profits which accrued to Edese Hollier, and which belonged to the community, was in excess of $10,000.00 per
Phillip Hollier confirmed the fact that 25 per cent of the net profits which accrued to Edese Hollier, and which became a part of the community existing between him and his second wife, were not withdrawn by the decedent, but were put back into the general fund of the partnership to be used in operating the business. He further testified that, over and above that 25 per cent, Edese Hollier also permitted the partnership to retain additional amounts from his 75 per cent of the net profits, and that the partnership used these additional sums contributed by the decedent in operating the partnership business. His testimony, in part, is as follows:
“Q. And, of course, I know that he could take them out at any time he wanted, but you must admit that if he didn’t want to take them out, which often he didn’t, that they were used by the partnership for re-investment to buy new merchandise, to pay salaries and for anything else the partnership required?
* * * * * *
A. Yes, they used it.
Q. So, actually, Philip, as a practical matter, those profits that Mr. Edese derrived (sic), certainly between 1947 and 1961, and probably before that, were mixed with the funds at the F. Hollier & Sons and were used for the business, isn’t that right?
******
A. Well, the money was still in the checking account of the store, I guess you’d say that it was mixed because you can’t take it out before you write a check for it.”
The statement of profit and loss for the year 1961 shows that during that year the partnership had a net profit of $12,618.26, but that the partners had withdrawn a little less than 50 per cent of that amount, indicating that some of the other partners besides the decedent also were re-investing their own funds in the business. Phillip Hollier testified that Edese Hollier “loaned” money to the store on one occasion, and that this loan was not repaid until after his death. He also stated that at the time of the last trial there was still some money in the partnership which belonged to the decedent, constituting portions of the net profits which were due and payable to Edese Hol-lier, but which had never been withdrawn by him. And, Items 10-A and 10-B of the inventory filed herein show that prior to his death Edese Plollier had left a total of $25,194.03, from what I consider to be community funds, in the partnership to be used in operating the business.
In my opinion, the evidence produced on the remand establishes clearly that funds belonging to the community which existed between Edese Hollier and Mrs. Dea Aucoin Hollier were regularly infused into the partnership business from and after 1936. Even if it should be held that no new partnership was created after the second marriage of Edese Hollier, therefore, there has been such a co-mingling of community and separate funds that it would be impossible to determine what part of the decedent’s interest in the partnership belonged to the community and what part belonged to his separate estate.
I think there are several other sound reasons why the decedent’s interest in this partnership must be decreed to constitute a part of the community. Some of these reasons are set out in our original opinion, and they will not be discussed here. My colleagues feel that the Supreme Court has rejected all of those other grounds, but I do not interpret the remand order as hav
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the judgment which has been rendered by my conscientious brothers who constitute the majority.
On Application for Rehearing.
En Banc. Rehearing denied.