These appeals are from an action involving the disintegration of a partnership. The original complaint, filed by Steve Wadley, sought the dissolution of a partnership and an accounting. The Lee Circuit Court tried those claims without a jury. The defendants Charles O. Walton and Steve Curry filed a counterclaim, stating tort claims. Those claims were separately tried to a jury. The trial court entered a judgment based on the nonjury proceeding and later entered another judgment based on the verdict the jury returned on the counterclaim. Wadley appealed from the first judgment, and the defendants appealed from the second judgment. We reverse both judgments.
Wadley actually filed two complaints on the same day, with the same case number. One sought recovery on a promissory note signed by himself, Walton, and Curry, as partners of Wild Free, a general partnership. The other sought dissolution of the partnership. Included in the complaint for dissolution was a prayer for relief, including, in pertinent part, "[t]hat an accounting of the partnership's assets, liabilities, affairs in winding up and as otherwise may be proper be performed by a Certified Public Accountants [sic] appointed by or approved by the Court." It is clear from these combined complaints that Wadley was not only seeking equitable relief — a dissolution and an accounting — but was also seeking legal relief based on the partnership note.
The partnership was formed on November 1, 1994, and any action relating to it is governed by the Alabama Partnership Act (APA), §
Ex Parte Master Boat Builders, Inc.,"the APA merely codified the historical remedy provided at common law to a partner who has sued fellow partners over matters that resulted from partnership affairs, and this remedy has always required an equitable accounting."
Based on the foregoing, we reverse the judgment of the trial court as it relates to Wadley's claims, and we instruct the trial court, on remand, to order an accounting and to hold a hearing so that it can issue an order consistent with that contemplated in Dutton v. Lemaster. (See footnote 1.) Additionally, we reverse that portion of the judgment that is based on the jury verdict on Walton and Curry's counterclaim; on remand, the claims stated in the counterclaim should be retried after the accounting has been completed.
The appellant's request for an attorney fee is denied.
2990181 — REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS. *Page 494
2990611 — REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Crawley, Thompson, and Murdock, JJ., concur.
Yates, P.J., concurs in the result.
