Henkels & McCoy, Inc. v. Adochio , 138 F.3d 491 ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1998 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    3-9-1998
    Henkels & McCoy Inc v. Adochio
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 97-1170
    Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1998
    Recommended Citation
    "Henkels & McCoy Inc v. Adochio" (1998). 1998 Decisions. Paper 40.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1998/40
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    Filed March 9, 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 97-1170
    HENKELS & McCOY, INC.
    v.
    ROBERT ADOCHIO, RALPH ANDERSON, ROBERT
    BADER, RALPH BARUCH, JOHN BUCK, ALAN
    GOLDBERG, FRED GREEN, LEONARD C. GREEN,
    C. BRUCE JOHNSTONE, HERBERT KAUFER, BILL
    LUCAS, WILLIAM MILLER, ARTHUR ROTHLEIN, EDWARD
    ROWAN, JOSEPH SCUTELLARO, CONRAD STRUDLER,
    BARRY WAGENBERG, ARTHUR WELLMAN, JAMES R.
    WILLING, and CHESTER DAVIS
    Ralph Anderson, Robert Bader, Ralph Baruch, John Buck,
    Fred Green, Leonard C. Green, C. Bruce Johnstone,
    Herbert Kaufer, Bill Lucas, Arthur Rothlein, Edward
    Rowan, Joseph Scutellaro, Barry Wagenberg, Arthur
    Wellman, James R. Willing and Chester Davis,
    Appellants
    An Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    D.C. No. 94-cv-03958
    Argued: October 15, 1997
    Before: STAPLETON, ALITO, and ROSENN, Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed March 9, 1998)
    Robert J. Stern
    Stradley, Ronon, Stevens & Young
    2600 One Commerce Square
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellee
    Roger B. Kaplan
    Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer
    90 Woodbridge Center Drive
    P.O. Box 10
    Woodbridge, NJ 07095
    Counsel for Appellants
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ROSENN, Circuit Judge.
    This appeal presents an important question pertaining to
    the obligation of limited partners to return capital
    contributions distributed to them in violation of their
    partnership agreement which required that they establish
    reasonably necessary reserves. The issue is rendered
    complex by an interrelated maze of corporations and
    partnerships devised by the limited partners and the
    general partner in their efforts to develop two separate real
    estate projects. One of these, Timber Knolls, was aborted
    shortly after conception, and the other, Chestnut Woods,
    became the genesis of protracted litigation and of this
    appeal.
    The defendants-appellants are limited partners of Red
    Hawk North Associates, L.P. (Red Hawk) L.P., a New Jersey
    limited partnership. G&A Development Corporation (G&A)
    is the general partner of Red Hawk. Cedar Ridge
    Development Corporation (Cedar Ridge), a New Jersey
    corporation, and Red Hawk entered into a joint venture
    agreement, the Chestnut Woods Partnership (Chestnut), to
    develop, construct, and market residential homes in Bucks
    County, Pennsylvania. Red Hawk and Cedar Ridge are both
    general partners of Chestnut Woods. Under the joint
    venture agreement, Red Hawk would provide the funding
    and Cedar Ridge would provide the land which it previously
    2
    had agreed to purchase. Cedar Ridge would act as the
    managing partner and general contractor.
    On December 29, 1989, Cedar Ridge, as general
    contractor for Chestnut Woods, entered into a written
    subcontract with Henkels & McCoy, Inc. (Henkels), the
    plaintiff herein, to have it furnish the labor, materials, and
    equipment for the installation of the storm and sanitary
    sewer systems for the project. Cedar Ridge agreed to pay
    Henkels a fixed-price of $300,270 under the contract.
    Henkels completed the installation of the storm and sewer
    systems but Chestnut Woods defaulted in making the
    payments due under the contract. Henkels, a Pennsylvania
    corporation, then filed three actions in the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania;
    Henkels filed the first in December 1990 against Cedar
    Ridge and Red Hawk, trading as Chestnut Woods, for the
    balance due on the contract plus interest. The court
    entered a default judgment which was not satisfied in
    whole or part.
    Henkels then filed suit against G&A in its capacity as a
    general partner of Red Hawk and obtained a default
    judgment in the same amount as it had obtained against
    Cedar Ridge and Red Hawk. Efforts to obtain payment on
    this judgment also proved fruitless and counsel for the
    defendants advised plaintiff 's counsel by letter dated
    October 26, 1993 that Red Hawk was worthless. Henkels'
    counsel also had been advised that G&A was unable to pay
    the judgment out of its assets.
    Henkels finally brought this suit against the nineteen
    limited partners of Red Hawk (the Partners), standing in the
    shoes of the Red Hawk limited partnership; sixteen of the
    partners are parties to this appeal. Henkels sought, inter
    alia, to compel replacement of certain capital distributions
    made by Red Hawk to the limited partners aggregating
    $492,000 during the period that Cedar Ridge was obligated
    under its contract with Henkels to pay Henkels $300,270.
    Henkels alleged that the capital distributions were made in
    violation of the Red Hawk limited partnership agreement
    and S 42:2A-46(b) of the New Jersey Uniform Limited
    Partnership Law of 1976 (New Jersey ULPL).
    3
    After the district court denied both Henkels's and the
    Partners' motions for summary judgment,1 it conducted a
    bench trial and on January 6, 1997, entered judgment in
    favor of Henkels. The court held each limited partner of Red
    Hawk liable to Henkels for his proportionate share of
    liability in the total amount of $371,101.84 plus interest to
    the date of payment of any judgment. The Partners
    appealed. We affirm.2
    I.
    The following facts are undisputed and are based upon
    the stipulation of the parties and the findings of fact made
    by the district court. The Red Hawk partnership, consisting
    of 20 (1 deceased)3 limited partners and one corporate
    general partner, G&A, was formed in 1986. Pursuant to
    their partnership agreement, the Partners contributed $3.5
    million in capital which ultimately they allocated to two
    distinct partnership projects, Timber Knolls and Chestnut
    Woods.
    In 1987, Red Hawk and Cedar Ridge entered into a joint
    venture agreement forming the Chestnut Woods
    Partnership, with both Red Hawk and Cedar Ridge as
    general partners. Under the joint venture agreement, Red
    Hawk would provide the capital funds for the project and
    Cedar Ridge would provide the general management and
    assign its contract for the purchase of the land. Red Hawk
    funded the Partnership with an initial capital contribution
    of $650,000 (and an additional contribution of $200,000 in
    1988). Cedar Ridge agreed to act as both the managing
    partner and the general contractor of the Chestnut Woods
    project. In addition, Cedar Ridge had the right to incur
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. Henkels & McCoy, Inc. v. Adochio, 
    906 F. Supp. 244
    (E.D. Pa. 1995).
    2. The district court had jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28
    U.S.C. S 1332, as it is a civil action involving parties of diverse
    citizenship and the amount in controversy at the time the suit was filed
    in 1994 was in excess of the then existing $50,000 jurisdictional
    amount. This Court has appellate jurisdiction of the district court's
    final
    order pursuant to 28 U.S.C. S1291.
    3. Conrad Strudler, a limited partner, died before trial and was no longer
    a defendant.
    4
    liabilities on behalf of the partnership in connection with
    the partnership's reasonable and legitimate business,
    borrow money in the name of the partnership, and incur
    reasonable and legitimate expenses related to the Chestnut
    Woods property. Work on the Chestnut Woods project
    subsequently commenced.
    In 1988, Red Hawk and Cedar Ridge entered into a
    second and distinct joint venture agreement to form the
    Timber Knolls partnership, under which both Red Hawk
    and Cedar Ridge were also general Partners. Red Hawk
    contributed $2.3 million to the Timber Knolls partnership
    and Cedar Ridge again agreed to act as both the managing
    partner and the general contractor of the project. Unlike the
    Chestnut Woods project, the Timber Knolls project never
    commenced operations. Therefore, in 1988, the Red Hawk
    Partners entered into an agreement with Cedar Ridge
    requiring the latter to return Red Hawk's $2.3 million
    capital contribution. As evidence of this obligation, Cedar
    Ridge executed promissory notes aggregating $2.3 million
    with interest and principal payable quarterly.4 Cedar Ridge
    made quarterly payments to Red Hawk on the notes, and
    G&A distributed these payments to the individual Red
    Hawk Partners, as follows:
    Payments by    Distributions by
    Cedar Ridge    G&A to the
    to Red Hawk    Red Hawk
    Date             On the Notes   Partners
    (1) Jan. 1989    $ 78,750       $ 76,200
    (2) April 1989   $215,000       $207,900
    (3) July 1989    $215,000       $207,900
    Totals           $508,750       $492,000
    Meanwhile, on December 29, 1988, Cedar Ridge, in its
    role as general contractor of Chestnut Woods, bound itself
    to a $300,270 fixed-price contract with Henkels, under
    which Henkels agreed to furnish and install storm and
    _________________________________________________________________
    4. Each note initially called for quarterly interest of $78,750 only, with
    balloon payments of principal due on the third quarter of each year. In
    addition, the $2.3 million due was subsequently reduced to $2.1 million,
    with $200,000 transferred to Red Hawk's stake in Chestnut Woods,
    thereby increasing its investment to $850,000.
    5
    sanitary sewer systems for the Chestnut Woods
    development. The contract identified Cedar Ridge as the
    "General Contractor," Henkels as the "Subcontractor," and
    Chestnut Woods as the "Property Owner." The contract did
    not mention the relationship between Cedar Ridge and the
    Chestnut Woods Partnership, and made no reference to Red
    Hawk. It provided that the General Contractor, Cedar
    Ridge, was obligated to pay Henkels, payments to be made
    against billed invoices 30 days after approved inspection. At
    that time, Henkels was unaware that Cedar Ridge and Red
    Hawk were partners in Chestnut Woods.
    On January 16, 1989, Henkels commenced the
    installation of the Chestnut Woods storm and sewer
    systems and completed the work according to the contract
    in late 1989. Under the contract, Cedar Ridge was required
    to pay Henkels in progress payments as invoiced.
    Accordingly, Henkels invoiced Cedar Ridge and received
    payments as follows:
    Invoice            Invoice
    Date               Amount           Invoice Status
    (1) Feb. 24, 1989    $ 37,632       paid in full 4/4/89
    (2) May 24, 1989     $ 33,421       paid in full 7/6/89
    (3) Aug. 14, 1989    $215,175       only $25,000 paid on 10/19/89
    (4) Sept. 28, 1989   $ 37,183       no payment
    (5) Nov. 9, 1989     $ 10,586       no payment
    $333,996       Total amount paid = $ 96,053
    Total amount unpaid = $237,943
    Thus, Henkels received a partial payment in October on
    its August invoice and no payments on its September and
    November invoices, leaving a total unpaid balance of
    $237,943. G&A, the general partner for Red Hawk, failed to
    establish any reserves from the cash receipts of the limited
    partnership.
    On March 16, 1990, Cedar Ridge sold its assets to Red
    Hawk. Shortly thereafter, in April 1990, G&A agreed with
    Henkels to pay Cedar Ridge's outstanding obligations to it,
    including accrued interest. However, Cedar Ridge paid only
    two small payments aggregating $8,000.
    On December 19, 1990, Henkels sued Cedar Ridge and
    Red Hawk, trading as Chestnut Woods, claiming breach of
    6
    the installation contract and the April 1990 agreement,
    unjust enrichment, and conspiracy to defraud. Henkels
    obtained judgment against Cedar Ridge and Red Hawk in
    the amount of $282,421.55, including interest. Cedar Ridge
    and Red Hawk were unable to satisfy this judgment, in
    whole or in part.
    In June 1992, Henkels sued G&A in its capacity as
    general partner of Red Hawk for the amount of the
    judgment previously obtained against Cedar Ridge and Red
    Hawk. On August 12, 1992, the Henkels obtained a default
    judgment against G&A in the sum of $282,424.55 plus
    interest at 6% per annum from October 15, 1991. When
    Henkels learned that G&A was unable to satisfy this
    judgment in whole or in part, it filed the instant suit
    seeking to have the Partners return to Red Hawk the cash
    capital distributions they received in 1989 as limited
    partners so that Red Hawk could satisfy the judgment
    obtained by Henkels against it.
    The parties stipulated in the district court that the
    distributions made to the Red Hawk limited partners
    constituted a return of capital and that the distributions
    did not violate the New Jersey Limited Partnership Act. The
    district court concluded, however, in a careful and
    thorough opinion, that Paragraph 12(a) of the Red Hawk
    agreement of limited partnership governed the distribution
    of all cash receipts, except those derived from the operation
    of the property, and found that the payments on the
    promissory note from Cedar Ridge to Red Hawk did not
    constitute cash receipts derived from operations. It
    therefore held that the general partner was obligated to
    follow the mandate of Paragraph 12(a)(iv) of the partnership
    agreement which required the establishment of reasonable
    reserves prior to distributing cash receipts to the limited
    partners.
    The district court found that the general partner in Red
    Hawk failed to establish any reserves and that Red Hawk
    had knowledge of its contingent obligations in the Chestnut
    Woods project and knew or should have known of the
    strong potential that the assets of Chestnut Woods would
    not cover the expenses it continued to incur for site
    improvements by Henkels and for which Red Hawk was
    7
    ultimately responsible. Accordingly, it held that Red Hawk
    violated the partnership agreement by failing to establish
    reasonable reserves to cover the cost of the site
    improvements made by Henkels.
    The court accordingly entered a verdict in favor of
    Henkels and against the Partners individually for their
    proportionate share of liability in accordance with the
    monetary sums set forth in its conclusions of law in the
    total amount of $371,101.84 to date plus interest to the
    date of payment of any judgment.
    The Partners appealed.
    II.
    On appeal, the Partners contend that the district court
    erred in holding that at the times of the distributions by
    Red Hawk to its limited partners, Henkels was a creditor of
    Red Hawk and that the distributions were made in violation
    of the partnership agreement. They also argue that even if
    Henkels were a creditor of Chestnut Woods, Red Hawk, as
    a Chestnut Woods partner, was not jointly and severally
    liable for the partnership debts (as a guarantor of payment)
    but rather only contingently liable as a guarantor of
    collection, and then only in the event Henkels obtained a
    judgment against the Chestnut Woods Partnership and
    failed to collect on such judgment.
    This Court reviews a district court's construction and
    application of the New Jersey Uniform Limited Partnership
    Law de novo. See Salve Regina College v. Russell, 
    499 U.S. 225
    , 231 (1991); Schreiber v. Kellogg, 
    50 F.3d 264
    , 266 (3d
    Cir. 1995). However, whether Red Hawk and G&A breached
    the Red Hawk limited partnership agreement by failing to
    establish reasonably necessary reserves, and thus the
    Partners ultimately received the distributions in violation of
    the agreement, is a mixed question of law and fact.
    Accordingly, this Court exercises plenary review of the legal
    operation of the partnership agreement, but will vacate the
    district court's contract interpretations and subsidiary
    factual findings only if they are clearly erroneous. See
    Cooper Lab., Inc. v. International Surplus Lines Ins. Co., 
    802 F.2d 667
    , 671 (3d Cir. 1986); Ram Constr. Co., Inc. v.
    8
    American States Ins. Co., 
    749 F.2d 1049
    , 1053 (3d Cir.
    1984).
    As a preliminary matter, we must first address the Red
    Hawk Partners' argument that Henkels was not a creditor
    who had extended credit to Red Hawk at the time of the
    1989 capital distributions, and therefore the Partners were
    not liable to Henkels. The Partners base their argument on
    Section 42:2A-46(a) of New Jersey's ULPL, entitled "Liability
    upon return of contribution," which provides
    a. If a limited partner has received the return of any
    part of his contribution without violation of the
    partnership agreement or this chapter, he is liable to
    the limited partnership for a period of one year
    thereafter for the amount of the returned contribution,
    but only to the extent necessary to discharge the
    limited partnership's liabilities to creditors who
    extended credit to the limited partnership during the
    period the contribution was held by the partnership.
    N.J. Stat. Ann. S 42:2A-46(a) (emphasis added). The
    Partners' reliance on this section is, however, misguided for
    several reasons: first, and most importantly, Henkels
    brought suit under Section 42:2A-46(b) not (a); second,
    subsection (b) is not in any way dependent upon nor does
    it even make cross reference to subsection (a); third,
    subsection (b) does not require that Henkels have extended
    credit or have been a creditor, nor does it even mention the
    word "creditor." Finally, subsection (b) addresses an entirely
    different concern than subsection (a): contributions made
    in violation of a partnership agreement or the New Jersey
    ULPL as opposed to distributions made without such
    violations but to the prejudice of creditors. Accordingly,
    Section 42:2A-46(a) is irrelevant to the issues raised on this
    appeal.
    Our analysis does not end with this conclusion, however,
    because as just mentioned, Henkels does allege that the
    distributions made by G&A to the Partners were illegal
    under Section 42:2A-46(b) of the New Jersey ULPL. Henkels
    specifically alleges that the distributions violated the New
    Jersey ULPL because they were made in violation of the Red
    Hawk partnership agreement. Accordingly, we confine our
    9
    analysis to the relevant sections of the partnership
    agreement in conjunction with Section 42:2A-46(b) which,
    in its entirety, reads as follows:
    b. If a limited partner has received the return of any
    part of his contribution in violation of the partnership
    agreement or this chapter, he is liable to the limited
    partnership for a period of six years thereafter for the
    amount of the contribution wrongfully returned.
    (emphasis added). Section 12(a) of the Red Hawk
    partnership agreement specifically provided that cash
    receipts be used for the establishment of reasonable
    reserves (for creditors) before such receipts be distributed
    to the Partners.5 The Partners contend that the
    distributions were not made in violation of the partnership
    agreement because Henkels, under the sewer subcontract,
    at most was a creditor of only Cedar Ridge, not of either
    Chestnut Woods or Red Hawk. Thus Red Hawk, they argue,
    was not required to establish reserves. Pursuant to this
    reasoning, the Partners assert that because Henkels was
    not a creditor, they did not receive the 1989 distributions
    in violation of the partnership agreement and thus did not
    violate the New Jersey ULPL.
    The district court, however, committed no error when it
    found that Henkels was a creditor of Red Hawk even
    though Henkels was not in direct contractual privity with
    either Chestnut Woods or Red Hawk. The Partners contend
    that this was in error and that they could not be liable to
    Henkels because Cedar Ridge was acting solely in its
    capacity as general contractor and not as a partner in
    Chestnut Ridge when it entered into the contract with
    Henkels. Thus they contend that the contract did not bind
    Chestnut Woods or Red Hawk in any way.
    _________________________________________________________________
    5. Section 12, in pertinent part, provides that:
    (a) Application of Cash Receipts. Cash receipts shall be applied
    in the following order of priority:
    . . .
    (iv) to the establishment of such reserves as the General Partner
    shall reasonably deem necessary; and
    (v) to distributions to the Partners . . .
    10
    In support of their argument, the Partners note that the
    Subcontract Agreement with Henkels identifies Cedar Ridge
    as the "General Contractor," Henkels as the
    "Subcontractor," makes no mention of Red Hawk, and
    merely lists the Chestnut Woods Partnership as the
    "Property Owner." The contract, signed only by Henkels and
    Cedar Ridge, also states that Henkels shall invoice and be
    paid by Cedar Ridge, and provides that the Chestnut Woods
    property shall not serve as security for payment or be
    subjected to liens. The Partners also consider significant
    that Henkels acknowledged that the contract was with
    Cedar Ridge only and that Henkels had no knowledge that
    Cedar Ridge or Red Hawk were partners in Chestnut
    Woods. The Partners argue that these facts conclusively
    establish that Cedar Ridge entered into the contract solely
    in its capacity as general contractor, not as a general
    partner of Chestnut Woods, and therefore Cedar Ridge is
    solely liable under the contract.6
    This "two hats" argument, although creative, is merely
    one of form over substance, ignoring the essence of the
    Chestnut Woods partnership agreement as well as
    fundamental principles of agency and partnership law
    which largely control the outcome of this case. First, the
    essence of the Chestnut Woods partnership agreement was
    that Red Hawk would "fund the PARTNERSHIP" by
    providing the capital with which to develop the property,
    while Cedar Ridge would contribute its development
    expertise by "act[ing] as the MANAGING PARTNER and
    GENERAL CONTRACTOR." (App. 76a, "Joint Venture
    Agreement, Chestnut Woods Partnership"). Thus, when
    Cedar Ridge signed the contract with Henkels as General
    Contractor, it simultaneously also was acting as a partner
    in the joint venture pursuant to its express authority to
    _________________________________________________________________
    6. The Partners cite in their brief, In Re Moserbeth Assoc., 
    128 B.R. 716
    (E.D. Pa. 1991), as support for this argument. Moserbeth, however, is
    inapposite. In Moserbeth, the general contractor was not itself a partner
    in the limited partnership, but instead was a separate and distinct
    corporation owned 100% by a partner in the partnership. This separate
    and distinct corporate identity was critical to the Moserbeth court
    holding that the partnership was not liable for the debts of the general
    contractor.
    11
    "act as the . . . GENERAL CONTRACTOR" as provided in
    the Chestnut Woods partnership / joint venture agreement.
    Second, it is elementary that "[e]very partner is an agent of
    the partnership for the purpose of its business, and the act
    of every partner . . . binds the partnership, unless the
    partner so acting has in fact no authority to act for the
    partnership in the particular matter." N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 42:1-9(1); see also Eule v. Eule Motor Sales, 
    170 A.2d 241
    ,
    243 (N.J. 1961); Restatement (Second) of AgencySS 12, 140
    (1958). This principle holds true even when, as here, the
    principal is undisclosed and the agent signs the contract in
    his individual capacity for the benefit of the partnership.
    But when a third party creditor ascertains an agency
    relationship, it may hold the partnership as principal liable
    (and ultimately the individual partners) even though the
    creditor was unaware of the agency relationship at the time
    that he extended the credit to the agent. See Looman Realty
    Corp. v. Broad St. Nat'l Bank of Trenton, 
    161 A.2d 247
    , 255-
    56 (N.J. 1960) ("The principal, if discovered, may also be a
    party to the contract."); Levy v. Iavarone, 
    154 A. 527
    (N.J.
    1931) (seller can recover from partner, although seller did
    not know at the time credit was extended to the partner's
    agent that a partnership relationship existed between the
    partner and the agent); Yates v. Repetto, 
    47 A. 632
    , 633
    (N.J. 1900) (when credit is given to an agent, and the
    principal is unknown, the creditor may elect upon
    disclosure of the principal, to hold either the agent or the
    principal liable); Moss v. Jones, 
    225 A.2d 369
    , 371 (N.J.
    Super. Ct. App. Div. 1966) ("If the existence of the principal
    is not known until after [a judgment against the agent goes
    unsatisfied], then the undisclosed principal may be sued,
    notwithstanding the judgment against the agent.");
    Restatement (Second) of Agency SS 186, 190, 194, 195
    (1958).
    Here, it is undisputed that Red Hawk was a partner with
    Cedar Ridge in the Chestnut Woods Partnership, that Cedar
    Ridge had actual authority to enter into the contract with
    Henkels,7 that the sewer systems were being installed for
    _________________________________________________________________
    7. Paragraph 13.1(b) of the Chestnut Woods partnership agreement
    delegated to the managing partner, Cedar Ridge, general management
    12
    the benefit of the Chestnut Woods Partnership, and that
    Cedar Ridge was entitled to reimbursement from Chestnut
    Woods for all monies paid by Cedar Ridge to Henkels.
    Accordingly, the district court committed no error when it
    ruled that, although indirect, a creditor relationship existed
    between Red Hawk and Henkels based on the contract
    signed by Red Hawk's partner in the Chestnut Woods
    Partnership, Cedar Ridge.
    The Partners also argue that the district court erred in
    finding that Henkels was a creditor of Red Hawk, because,
    even assuming arguendo that a contractual relationship
    existed between Red Hawk and Henkels, Henkels had not
    extended any credit to Cedar Ridge, Chestnut Woods, or
    Red Hawk. The unpaid invoices at issue here are from
    August, September, and November 1989, whereas the
    distributions to the Red Hawk Partners were made prior, in
    January, April, and July 1989. Therefore, the Partners
    claim that this is in itself prima facie proof that Henkels
    was not a creditor -- i.e., Henkels was not owed any money
    at the time of the distributions. These arguments, however,
    take a very narrow and ultimately erroneous legal view of
    the contractual relationship with Henkels and even a more
    constricted view of the definition of creditor.
    Although the term creditor is undefined in the New
    Jersey ULPL and there is no New Jersey case law
    interpreting the term in this context, the term creditor is
    not foreign to New Jersey law. For instance, many New
    Jersey statutes define creditor very broadly to include "the
    holder of any claim, of whatever character, . . . whether
    _________________________________________________________________
    authority and decision making power, including: "[t]he right to incur
    liabilities on behalf of the [Chestnut Woods Partnership] in connection
    with the reasonable and legitimate business of the [Chestnut Woods
    Partnership]." In addition, Paragraph 13.1(n) delegated the right and
    power "to enter into such contracts or agreements deemed necessary or
    appropriate on behalf of the [Chestnut Woods Partnership]." It is
    significant that these provisions, unlike paragraphs 13.1(d), (g), (j),
    (l), &
    (m), allowed Cedar Ridge to incur "on behalf of the [Chestnut Woods
    Partnership]," and did not require that it incur liabilities and enter
    contracts only "in the name of the [Chestnut Woods Partnership]."
    (emphasis added).
    13
    secured or unsecured, matured or unmatured, liquidated or
    unliquidated, absolute or contingent." See N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 14A:14-1(b) (Business Corporation Act); N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 15A:12-18(c) (Nonprofit Corporation Act); and N.J. Stat.
    Ann. S 25:2-7 (Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act)
    (repealed), & N.J. Stat. Ann. S 12A:6-109 cmt. (UCC Bulk
    Transfers) (repealed). Cf. City of Philadelphia v. Stepan
    Chem. Co., 
    713 F. Supp. 1491
    , 1493 n.3 (E.D. Pa. 1989) (to
    qualify as creditor, a party's claim must be based on "some
    legal foundation, such as an underlying debt, a contract, or
    a lawsuit"). Also, the statute is remedial in nature,
    "designed to protect creditors and should be interpreted
    with this purpose in mind." Henkels & McCoy, Inc., 906 F.
    Supp. at 252-53. In addition, the generic common law
    definition of creditor is very broad and
    includes every one having [the] right to require the
    performance of any legal obligation [or] contract, . . . or
    a legal right to damages growing out of [a] contract or
    tort, and includes not merely the holder of a fixed and
    certain present debt, but every one having a right to
    require the performance of any legal obligation [or]
    contract, . . . or a legal right to damages growing out
    of [a] contract or tort.
    Black's Law Dictionary 368 (6th ed. 1990) (emphasis
    added). Finally, the failure of the statute to define creditor
    is indicative of the New Jersey legislature's intent that the
    term "creditor" be construed consistent with the New Jersey
    ULPL's broad remedial purpose and its common usage. See
    N.J. Stat. Ann. S 1:1-1 (General rules of construction). The
    district court cited many of these reasons and found them
    sufficiently persuasive, as do we, to adopt a broad
    definition of creditor which includes unmatured payments
    of a debt upon performance under a contract such as
    Henkels's.
    Pursuant to the subcontract agreement, Henkels had a
    claim to payment for a fixed contract price to be paid in
    installments upon progressive completion of the sewer
    work. Although the Partners argue that Henkels did not
    have a claim at the time of the 1989 distributions, the
    contract between Henkels and Cedar Ridge was entered
    into on December 29, 1988. Thus Henkels and Cedar Ridge
    14
    had definite obligations to each other under the contract
    over a week prior to the first distribution by the general
    partner to the Red Hawk limited partners. Those obligations
    required Henkels to make the site improvements and Cedar
    Ridge to make scheduled payments as performance was
    rendered. In addition, G&A made the bulk of the
    distributions after Henkels had commenced work and was
    incurring costs and expenses in fulfilling its commitments
    under the contract. Thus Chestnut Woods and Red Hawk
    had incurred liability as early as December 29, 1988,
    although the bulk of the payment matured the month after
    the last distribution by Red Hawk to the Partners. The
    Partners' overly narrow definition of creditor is inconsistent
    with the obvious financial realities that existed at the time,
    the generally accepted common law meaning of the term,
    the broad definition used in other New Jersey statutory
    contexts, and the broad remedial purpose of the statute.
    Accordingly, we hold that under this broad definition and
    consistent with the principles of agency and partnership
    law previously discussed, Henkels was not only a creditor
    of Cedar Ridge, but of Chestnut Woods, and thus Red
    Hawk and its partners.
    The Partners further argue that even if we conclude that
    Henkels was a creditor of Chestnut Woods, Red Hawk was
    not "jointly and severally" liable for the partnership's debts,
    but only "jointly" liable, as it was only a partner in
    Chestnut Woods. The Partners find this significant and
    contend that as a partner Red Hawk was only contingently
    liable as a guarantor of collection, not as a guarantor of
    payment. Furthermore, the Partners contend that even then
    Red Hawk was not liable until Henkels had obtained a
    judgment against the Chestnut Woods partnership, was
    unable to collect, and then sought payment from Chestnut
    Woods's partner, Red Hawk. Therefore, the Partners
    conclude, Henkels was not a creditor of Red Hawk until
    this eventuality ultimately did occur in October 1991--
    more than two years after the distributions. Thus, they
    assert there was no violation of Section 42:2A-46(b) or the
    partnership agreement. Although the Partners make much
    of the distinction between "joint" and "joint and several
    liability," and between "guarantor of collection" and
    15
    "guarantor of payment," the distinctions between these
    terms are illusory here and are not dispositive.
    Under the New Jersey ULPL, partners are only jointly
    liable for contract obligations of the partnership, and thus
    a contract creditor of the partnership must first exhaust
    the partnership's assets before it can pursue the assets of
    the individual partners. See N.J. Stat. Ann. S 42:1-15(b).
    The Partners dwell on their argument that joint liability
    means that partners are merely guarantors of collection
    rather than guarantors of payment, citing Seventy-Three
    Land, Inc. v. Maxlaw Partners, 
    637 A.2d 202
    (N.J. Super.
    Ct. App. Div. 1994). They contend that this distinction
    means that Henkels was not a creditor of Red Hawk until
    after it obtained a judgment against Red Hawk's assets in
    October 1991, "long after the distributions to the limited
    partners were made."
    This argument is without merit, however, because the
    Partners overly emphasize the distinction between
    guarantor of collection and guarantor of payment by
    ignoring the sentence in Seventy-Three Land, Inc.
    immediately preceding the courts' discussion of this
    distinction; that sentence actually supports an opposite
    conclusion. The court in Seventy-Three Land, Inc. merely
    stated that "[p]artners are liable for partnership contract
    debts, but their assets are not at risk until it is shown that
    the partnership cannot discharge the debt." 
    Id. at 204
    (emphasis added). This language, consistent with the broad
    definition of creditor previously discussed, clearly
    demonstrates that jointly liable partners such as Red Hawk
    do have a present liability. The significance to the Red
    Hawk Partners is that payment of that liability out of their
    individual assets is contingent, rather than fixed, until the
    partnership's assets are first exhausted. Although the
    Partners' individual assets were only contingently at risk,
    the Partners nonetheless were liable to Henkels from the
    time the contract was signed and, as ultimately did happen,
    their assets did become available when the Red Hawk
    partnership's assets proved insufficient to meet its debt
    with Henkels.
    Accordingly, we hold that the district court's finding that
    Henkels was a creditor of Red Hawk was correct. See
    16
    Henkels & 
    McCoy, 906 F. Supp. at 252-53
    . At the time of
    the 1989 distributions, Henkels was a creditor of Red Hawk
    and the individual Red Hawk partners were liable for that
    debt.8
    III.
    Although Henkels was a creditor of Red Hawk, the 1989
    distributions were in violation of the partnership agreement
    only if, as Henkels argues, Red Hawk's distributions
    constituted a failure to abide by the partnership
    agreement's requirement to establish reasonably necessary
    reserves. The Partners, however, contend that the district
    court made several errors in interpreting the Red Hawk
    partnership agreement which resulted in its finding that
    the distributions were in violation of the agreement by
    failing to establish such reasonable reserves.
    Section 9(b) of the partnership agreement grants the
    general partner, G&A, certain rights and powers, including,
    under subsection (ix), the power "to establish reasonable
    reserve funds from income derived from the Partnership's
    operations to provide for future . . . debt service or similar
    requirements." The Partners argue that this subsection is
    the only subsection of the agreement that permits or
    authorizes the general partner to reserve funds. Thus,
    according to the Partners, all reserves had to be (1)
    authorized by this subsection, (2) taken from income
    derived from operations, and (3) used for debt service.
    Therefore, had G&A reserved funds against the Henkels
    _________________________________________________________________
    8. The dissent would extend our holding far beyond its limit. It concludes
    that the majority holds "by necessary implication. . . that a distribution
    could not be made to Red Hawk partners unless cash reserves had been
    established to fund the payment of all anticipated future liabilities of
    the
    joint venture partnerships (owned in part by others) that might accrue
    over some unspecified period of time . . . ." Dissent at p. 30. We are not
    called upon in this case to decide whether reserves are required for "all
    anticipated future liabilities" and therefore the majority does not decide
    that question, either directly or by implication. The focus of our holding
    is merely that when there is clear liability under an existing contract,
    the
    equity partners cannot ignore that liability, recapture their capital
    investments, and leave the creditor spinning in the wind.
    17
    contract, the Partners contend that such reserves would
    have been taken in violation of this subsection of the
    partnership agreement because the funds would not have
    been derived from operations but from distributions of
    capital.
    The Partners' argument fails, however, because it
    selectively presents the language of Sections 9 and 12 and
    omits other relevant language which demonstrates that the
    Partners greatly overemphasize the significance of
    subsection (ix). First, the express language of Section 9(b)
    provides that the general partner possess all "rights and
    powers required for or appropriate to its management of the
    partnership's business which, by way of illustration but not
    by way of limitation, shall include the following: . . . (ix) to
    establish reasonable reserve funds from income derived
    from the partnership's operations to provide for future . . .
    debt service or similar requirements." This unambiguous
    language demonstrates that G&A had the right and power
    to establish reserves, even if not expressly authorized under
    subsection (ix), if it deemed them required or appropriate
    for the management of Red Hawk's business. The list of
    rights and powers in subsection (ix) is merely illustrative
    and is not an exclusive limitation on the general partner's
    rights and powers.
    Equally important, as the district court properly found,
    the distributions at issue here were not taken from income
    derived from operations, but were merely returns of capital
    of the aborted Timber Knolls partnership, which, as Red
    Hawk admits, "never got off the ground." Income from
    "operations," as used in this subsection, refers to income
    derived from the active, normal, on-going activities of the
    partnership. Timber Knolls never functioned, and thus
    there never was any income from operations. Therefore,
    subsection (ix) is not applicable to the distributions at issue
    here.9 It is completely irrelevant because the distributions
    _________________________________________________________________
    9. This point is significant in interpreting Section 12(a) as well.
    Following
    the order of priority for the distributions of cash receipts in Section
    12(a)(i)-(v) is a provision which prohibits the general partner from
    "retain[ing] and invest[ing] any Cash Receipts derived from the operations
    of the Property, except . . . (2) for investments of reserves permitted to
    be established under clause (ix) of Paragraph 9(b)." (emphasis added).
    Because the cash receipts used to fund the distributions were not
    derived from income from operations of Red Hawk property, this
    prohibition is not relevant to this appeal.
    18
    constituted capital funds retrieved by Red Hawk from its
    abandoned project, Timber Knolls. Although the Partners
    emphasize that the funds were derived from the Timber
    Knolls project, Subsection (ix) only addresses the reserving
    of funds derived from operations; the germinating project is
    immaterial.
    Finally, as previously discussed, Henkels qualified as a
    creditor of Red Hawk at the time the distributions were
    made. Therefore, pursuant to Section 12(a) of the Red Hawk
    limited partnership agreement governing the distribution of
    all cash receipts, the Red Hawk general partner was
    required to establish reasonable reserves from the cash
    received on the Timber Knolls promissory notes to meet its
    ongoing liability before distributing such cash to the
    individual limited partners. We, therefore, turn to the issue
    as to what would constitute a "reasonable" reserve to meet
    the outstanding liability under the Henkels subcontract.
    Although neither party provided the district court with
    any case law or treatise defining reasonable reserves, the
    court used the Black's Law Dictionary definition of
    "reasonable" and of "reserves" in the insurance context to
    define reasonable reserves in the business context before
    us. We agree with them that the insurance context is
    inappropriate for analysis because the nature of the
    insurance business differs significantly from that of an
    ordinary business partnership. Unlike an ordinary business
    partnership, an insurance company essentially is required
    to meet future, contingent obligations, and these reserves
    are required. The Partners instead propose that the highly
    deferential corporate "business judgment" standard is the
    appropriate standard. However, as Henkels correctly
    argues, the business judgment rule also is inapposite in the
    partnership context because it is a function of a unique
    corporate setting. See 3A William Meade Fletcher et al.,
    Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations
    SS1036-37 (perm. ed. rev. vol. 1994).
    Although the New Jersey courts have not yet addressed
    the issue of what constitutes reasonable reserves, we do not
    need to expressly define reasonable reserves in the context
    of this case because it is unnecessary to the disposition of
    this appeal. See Rush v. Scott Specialty Gases, Inc., 113
    
    19 F.3d 476
    , 486 (3d Cir. 1997) (declining to decide issues
    unnecessary to the appeal); Georgine v. Amchem Products,
    Inc., 
    83 F.3d 610
    , 623 (3d Cir. 1996) ("[W]e believe it
    prudent not to decide issues unnecessary to the disposition
    of the case."). Regardless of what standard the New Jersey
    courts will ultimately adopt, under any standard and using
    any definition of reasonable reserves, the Red Hawk general
    partner's failure to establish any reserves in the face of the
    fixed obligation and imminent payments due under the
    contract with Henkels and the operations of the Chestnut
    Woods development was callous and not reasonable.
    It is undisputed that of the approximately $500,000
    monies received by Red Hawk in 1989, the Red Hawk
    general partner (G&A) did not set aside any of these funds
    to establish reserves, even in the face of a contracted
    liability. Red Hawk argues, however, that this was not
    unreasonable because (1) the Red Hawk partnership had no
    liabilities and $3 million in assets at the time of the
    distributions; (2) Henkels had not yet invoiced Chestnut
    Woods; (3) the financial outlook of Red Hawk (& Chestnut
    Woods) was healthy; and (4) the express terms of the
    partnership agreement prohibited the taking of such
    reserves. Each of these contentions is without merit.
    First, the $3 million of assets included on Red Hawk's
    January 1, 1989 balance sheet is somewhat illusory. Of the
    $3 million in assets, a scant $22,000 was in the form of
    cash or other liquid assets. The remaining were almost
    exclusively illiquid: the $800,000 investment in the
    Chestnut Woods project itself which consisted of land and
    infrastructure and the $2.1 million Timber Knolls notes
    receivable from Cedar Ridge -- which were substantially
    distributed to the limited partners. Neither of these assets
    were readily available to satisfy Red Hawk obligations,
    especially not after the payments on the notes were
    distributed to the partners. Moreover, Red Hawk repeatedly
    left almost no money in its checking account after each
    distribution to the Partners, other than several thousand
    dollars to cover incidental operating expenses. Additionally,
    the absence of any formal liabilities from its balance sheet
    and the failure of Henkels to physically invoice Cedar Ridge
    did not mean that Red Hawk had no liabilities; it simply
    20
    was an "off-balance sheet" liability. In the accounting
    profession, an "off-balance sheet" liability is a financial
    obligation that is not formally recognized in an entity's
    accounting statements because no "accounting" obligation
    arises until the exchange transactions is completed;
    nonetheless, they do have real current and future cash flow
    consequences. See Accountant's Handbook, 10.29 (7th ed.
    1991). Under the broad definition of creditor established
    above, Red Hawk had an unmatured, fixed, off-balance
    sheet liability to Henkels.
    Although by itself this may be not determinative, more
    telling is the Partners' failure to identify any other source of
    funds from which the Red Hawk Partnership would be able
    to meet its obligations, including its contract obligation to
    Henkels. The Timber Knolls project never got off the
    ground, literally and figuratively, and based on the record,
    Chestnut Woods generated no earnings during the 1989 tax
    year and Red Hawk generated none during both 1988 and
    1989. Because the Chestnut Woods property was under
    development at the time, Chestnut Woods reported a loss
    during 1989 and Red Hawk reported losses on both its
    1988 and 1989 tax returns, and both Chestnut Woods and
    Red Hawk appear to have had negative cash flows during
    these years. Without any other source of cash or liquid
    assets, short of liquidating the Chestnut Woods property
    itself, it clearly was unreasonable for G&A to distribute to
    the Partners Red Hawk's only available source of payment
    without setting aside any reserves to meet the Henkels debt.10
    _________________________________________________________________
    10. As we noted above, see supra p. 10, under the New Jersey
    partnership statute and fundamental principles of agency law, every
    partner is an agent of the partnership and the act of every partner binds
    the partnership for the purpose of its business. Accordingly, the
    liability
    of the Red Hawk partnership to Henkels was committed by written
    contract between Henkels and Red Hawk's partner, Cedar Ridge, in
    December 1988, before any retrieval by the Partners of their capital
    investment in Timber Knolls. In addition, Red Hawk's project, Chestnut
    Woods, had current liabilities as of January 1, 1989, according to its tax
    returns, which disclosed debts of over $1.7 million. These liabilities
    also
    were in place prior to the retrieval of the Partners' investments in Red
    Hawk. Nevertheless, the dissent would relieve the Partners of any
    liability under the contract to creditor Henkels on the theory that from
    January to August 1989, Red Hawk "had no significant liabilities of any
    kind." Dissent at p. 29.
    21
    Second, and equally telling, G&A knew, or at least had
    ample notice, that the financial outlook of Red Hawk and
    Chestnut Woods was not as rosy at the time of the
    distributions as the Partners attempt to assert now. 11 For
    example, the Partners fail to mention or accurately state
    many of the following facts: (1) Red Hawk and G&A, in
    December 1988, received notification from Cedar Ridge that
    four separate and distinct types of delays in the Chestnut
    Woods project were resulting in additional financial
    burdens to it; (2) Cedar Ridge also informed Red Hawk that
    these financial burdens were worrisome given the decline
    already experienced in the housing market; (3) Red Hawk
    had a scant $22,000 in cash or other liquid assets on hand
    as of January 1, 1989; (4) Chestnut Woods had an equally
    scant $12,000 in cash or other liquid assets on hand as of
    January 1, 1989; (5) Chestnut Woods' January 1, 1989
    balance sheet showed over $1.7 million in current
    liabilities, with the land and construction in progress of
    Chestnut Woods comprising over 90% of its $2.4 million in
    assets, leaving meager resources available to pay for the
    planned 1989 site improvements, such as the $300,000 of
    sewer systems from Henkels;12 (6) as of March 7, 1989, Red
    Hawk had, at a minimum, imputed knowledge from its
    bank's written notice that interest on the Chestnut Woods
    mortgage would no longer be paid out of the interest
    reserve fund and that Cedar Ridge was responsible to pay
    _________________________________________________________________
    11. Even assuming arguendo that Red Hawk and G&A did not have
    actual notice or knowledge of the precarious financial condition of
    Chestnut Woods, "[t]here are many cases stating the general rule that
    knowledge of one partner [(Cedar Ridge)] will be imputed to the others."
    Harold Gill Reuschlein & William A. Gregory, The Law of Agency and
    Partnership S200 at 304 (1990); see also N.J. Stat. Ann. S 42:1-12
    ("Knowledge to any partner of any matter relating to partnership affairs
    . . . operate[s] as notice to or knowledge of the partnership . . . .");
    Claflin
    v. Wolff, 
    96 A. 73
    , 79 (N.J. 1915) ("If any of [the partners] had notice
    or
    knowledge . . . they would all be affected by it.").
    12. Red Hawk states, and its 1989 tax return shows, that Chestnut
    Woods' assets were $2.4 million, not $1.8 million. Although the district
    court found the number to be $1.8 million, this difference is
    inconsequential; either amount consisted almost exclusively of the
    project's land and work-in-progress -- i.e., illiquid assets, leaving next
    to
    nothing to pay its $1.7 million in current liabilities.
    22
    interest out of its own funds due to "the past unfortunate
    circumstances [which] caused slower than expected
    [progress on the Chestnut Woods project,]" and which
    caused the remaining interest reserve to become
    substantially depleted and potentially "insufficient to carry
    this loan;" and (7) the August 1989 $2.7 million appraisal
    of the Chestnut Woods project was merely a potential future
    retail estimate and contained the express caveat that this
    "value estimate[ ] assume[s] that all site improvements will
    be completed in a workmanlike manner and within a
    reasonable period of time."13
    Finally, as previously discussed, the Red Hawk
    partnership agreement did not prohibit G&A from reserving
    funds for the payment of Henkels. Section 9(b)(ix) is merely
    an illustration of G&A's rights and powers and, because the
    funds at issue were not derived from operations, ultimately
    was irrelevant to the funds at issue. More importantly,
    Section 12(a) expressly required that the available cash
    funds be used to establish reserves before they were
    distributed to the Partners.
    _________________________________________________________________
    13. The dissent ignores the foregoing realities of Red Hawk's and
    Chestnut Woods' financial straits while the Chestnut Woods project was
    still under development, and already beset by a negative cash flow in the
    project, while at the same time the Partners were retrieving all of their
    total capital investments in the Timber Knolls project. The dissent,
    again, would permit the Partners to escape liability in the face of
    Henkels' 1988 contract on the infirm premise that at the end of August
    1989, when all partner contributions had been repaid, Chestnut Woods
    had the project appraised at $2.7 million and Red Hawk "had significant
    net worth throughout this period." Dissent at p. 30. In the first place,
    the appraisal obtained by Chestnut Woods was merely an optimistic,
    potential, retail figure dependent on the market price for the lots, when
    and if sold, and the completion of the project "in a workmanlike manner
    and within a reasonable period of time." Second, even if the appraisal of
    the project were accurate, the frozen nature of the real estate -- not yet
    marketable -- provided no liquid source for payment of ongoing
    obligations. To illustrate, it could not meet the payment due of $215,175
    for the August delivery by Henkels. Further significant, Red Hawk and
    Chestnut Woods both reported losses during 1989, and both appear to
    have had negative cash flows. Both had meager sums of cash on hand,
    and Chestnut Woods had significant current liabilities with 90% of its
    assets frozen.
    23
    Although neither Henkels nor the district court attempted
    to determine what level of reserves was reasonable, no
    determination was needed because Red Hawk and G&A
    failed to establish any reserves. It is patently obvious that
    at least some level of reserves was reasonably necessary,
    and that the general partners' distributions and failure to
    reserve any money for the Henkels contract obligation, in
    light of Chestnut Woods' and Red Hawk's precarious
    financial condition, was unreasonable. Thus, the district
    court did not need to determine what level of reserves was
    reasonable; it clearly had an ample factual basis upon
    which to determine that the complete failure to establish
    any reserves was a violation of the Red Hawk partnership
    agreement's requirement that G&A establish some level of
    reserves before making distributions to the Partners.
    Accordingly, we hold that Red Hawk's failure to establish
    any reserves in light of both partnerships' then existing
    financial condition was not reasonable.
    IV.
    In conclusion, we find no merit to appellants'
    contentions. We see no error in the district court's
    conclusion that Henkels was a creditor of Red Hawk, and
    therefore the 1989 capital distributions to the Partners and
    failure to establish any reserves to fund its contract
    obligation to Henkels was a violation of the Red Hawk
    partnership agreement. The Partners are therefore obligated
    to return the improper capital distributions to Red Hawk.
    Because the plaintiff stands in the shoes of Red Hawk for
    the purpose of recovering these funds on behalf of the
    partnership, In re: Sharps Run Associates, 
    157 B.R. 766
    ,
    772-73 (D.N.J. 1993), and because of the multiple suits it
    already has been compelled to undergo to enforce collection
    of its debt, judicial resources will be conserved and
    economies of time and expenses effectuated, to hold the
    Partners directly liable to Henkels.
    Accordingly, the judgment of the district court will be
    affirmed. Costs taxed against the appellants.
    24
    STAPLETON, Circuit Judge, Dissenting:
    The critical issue posed by this appeal is one of intent -
    the intent of the Red Hawk partners when they negotiated
    their partnership agreement. Given the text of that
    agreement and the context in which it was executed, I
    believe the district court clearly erred when it interpreted
    Section 12(a)(iv) as precluding the three challenged
    payments to Red Hawk's limited partners.
    The relevant facts are documented and undisputed. Red
    Hawk is a limited partnership organized under the New
    Jersey Uniformed Limited Partnership Law to facilitate the
    investment of its corporate general partner and its
    individual limited partners in two specific real estate
    developments. The sole declared purpose of the partnership
    was to participate in two joint ventures pursuant to
    identified, previously executed joint venture agreements,
    each of which would independently develop a parcel of real
    estate in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The Timber Knoll
    joint venture was to develop the Timber Knoll property; the
    Chestnut Woods joint venture was to develop the Chestnut
    Woods property. In each instance, management of the joint
    venture was placed in the hands of an unrelated
    corporation with experience in the business of real estate
    development, the Cedar Ridge Development Corporation.
    The partners of Red Hawk contributed to it capital of $3.5
    million. Of this capital, $2.3 million was committed to the
    Timber Knoll joint venture, and $850,000 was committed to
    the Chestnut Woods joint venture. It was understood that
    Cedar Ridge would be simultaneously involved in other real
    estate development projects in New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
    and other states.
    Under the Chestnut Woods joint venture agreement,
    Cedar Ridge, as the "Managing Partner," was authorized to
    borrow money and to mortgage and sell assets. Red Hawk
    was to receive a Preferred Minimum Return on Capital prior
    to any distribution of profits to Cedar Ridge. The preferred
    return was equal to 15% "per annum based on simple
    interest payable quarterly on the amount of capital
    outstanding and not returned." J.A. at 91. However, "in the
    event the net cash working reserve of the [joint venture fell]
    below $500,000, the quarterly preferred return [could] be
    25
    deferred by the MANAGING PARTNER until the net cash
    working reserve has sufficient cash in excess of $500,000
    to pay the unpaid preferred return." J.A. at 91-92. The
    agreement further provided that no partners would have
    "the right to compel a distribution of profits or cash, unless
    the [joint venture] has accumulated an unwarranted
    amount of cash not reasonably needed for future business
    activities." J.A. at 93-94. Red Hawk's capital contribution
    was to be returned at the minimum rate of $12,400 per lot
    sold after the sale of the first 20 lots. In addition, the
    managing partner committed itself to "make a good faith
    effort to make minimum annual cash distributions equal to
    thirty-five percent (35%) of the distributive share of profits
    allocated to each PARTNER" for tax purposes. J.A. at 94.
    Distributions could be made in cash or property.
    It was in the context of this joint venture agreement and
    the similar Timber Knoll joint venture agreement that the
    Red Hawk Partnership Agreement was negotiated. Since the
    Red Hawk partners understood that cash flow would be
    coming to Red Hawk from the managing partner of the joint
    ventures only after Cedar Ridge had established reserves to
    service the only business operations in which Red Hawk
    would ever have an interest, the Red Hawk limited partners
    understandably sought assurance that joint venture profits
    and return of capital would not be accumulated in the Red
    Hawk partnership by its general partner, G&A.
    The Red Hawk Partnership Agreement thus provided for
    a mandatory pass-through of cash receipts, whether
    generated by the joint ventures in the regular course of
    business or otherwise, after the general partner had paid all
    of the currently due debt obligations of Red Hawk and had
    set aside specifically limited reserves. Any reserves were
    expressly limited to such revenue from operations as the
    general partner, in its discretion, considered appropriate for
    the purpose of paying anticipated administrative expenses
    and, in the event of the distribution of joint venture
    property in kind, anticipated property management
    expenses. Section 12(a) of the agreement thus provided:
    (a) Application of Cash Receipts. Cash Receipts shall
    be applied in the following order of priority:
    26
    (i) to the extent required, to the creditors of the
    Partnership, except to any Partner or any
    Affiliate thereof;
    (ii) to the extend required, to the payment of any
    debts or liabilities to any Partner or any
    Affiliate thereof (other than a loan to the
    Partnership by the Partner);
    (iii) to the payment in full of any loans to the
    Partnership by a Partner;
    (iv) to the establishment of such reserves as the
    General Partner shall reasonably deem
    necessary; and
    (v) to distributions to the Partners in accordance
    with Paragraphs 12(b) and (c) hereof.
    Notwithstanding the foregoing, the General Partner
    shall not retain and invest any Cash Receipts derived
    from the operations of the Property, except (1) to defray
    expenditures for any repair or improvement to any
    Property, which it, in its sole discretion, deems
    appropriate or (2) for investments of reserves permitted
    to be established under clause (ix) of Paragraph 9(b)
    hereof, nor shall the General Partner invest the net
    proceeds derived and retained by the Partnership from
    the sale or other disposition of any Property (including
    any total condemnation or destruction of any portion of
    the Property) except as otherwise provided herein.
    J.A. at 274.
    The term "Property" is defined in the Red Hawk
    Agreement to mean "the Buildings and Land in Bucks
    County, Pennsylvania." J.A. at 261. "Cash Receipts" means
    "all cash receipts of the Partnership from whatever source
    derived." J.A. at 259. Section 9 of that Agreement is entitled
    "Rights and Duties of the General Partner." It imposes no
    duty on the General Partner to set aside reserves for any
    purpose. In subsection (b)(ix), the subsection referenced in
    Section 12(a), the general partner is given the authority "to
    establish reasonable reserve funds from income derived
    from the Partnership's operations to provide for future
    27
    maintenance, repair, replacement, debt service or similar
    requirements." J.A. at 265.
    Read in the context of the Agreement and the
    expectations of the Partners, it is apparent that the
    dominant portion of Sections 12(a) is the paragraph
    commencing with the clause "Notwithstanding the
    foregoing." Indeed, that lead clause requires that this
    paragraph be given controlling significance over the
    preceding text. It mandates disbursement to the partners of
    all cash whether received by Red Hawk in the course of the
    normal operations of the joint venture properties or
    whether received by it from dispositions of joint venture
    property other than in the course of its regular business
    operations. The two exceptions recognize that the General
    Partner, in its sole discretion, should have the ability to
    retain cash derived from operations to establish reasonable
    reserves for property repairs and improvement, debt
    service, and other operating expenses.
    The subordinate portion of Section 12(a) that precedes
    the "notwithstanding" clause establishes the priorities
    among various interests that may compete for distributions
    of cash receipts. The purpose of subsection 12(a)(iv), in
    particular, is (1) to recognize the possibility that the
    General Partner may wish to withhold some funds
    pursuant to the two express exceptions from theflow
    through mandate; and (2) to emphasize that the General
    Partner's authority to do so is limited to such reserves as it
    might "reasonably deem necessary." Thus, subsection 12(a)
    is designed both to recognize the possibility of retention of
    cash receipts for authorized reserves at the discretion of the
    General Partner and, at the same time, to assure the
    limited partners that there will be no accumulation of even
    funds for reserves when the general partner, in the exercise
    of business judgment, could not reasonably regard them as
    necessary for the designated purposes.
    The Timber Knoll project never got off the ground. The
    requisite governmental approvals for development were not
    obtained by the owner of the Timber Knoll site, and the
    property was never purchased by the joint venture. When it
    appeared that the objective of the joint venture would have
    to be abandoned, an amendment to the joint venture
    28
    agreement was executed that called for the conversion of
    Red Hawk's $2.3 million capital contribution into
    promissory notes of Cedar Ridge. Pursuant to these notes,
    payments were received by Red Hawk in January 1989,
    April 1989, and July 1989. These payments represented a
    return of the capital contribution made by Red Hawk to the
    Timber Knoll joint venture and interest accrued thereon
    after the conversion.
    The Chestnut Woods project did get underway in late
    1988. Cedar Ridge served the Chestnut Woods joint venture
    not only as managing partner, but also as "general
    contractor" for the site improvements. The site
    improvements were to be financed, at least in part, through
    bank borrowing. Among these improvements were, of
    course, storm and sanitary sewer systems. Cedar Ridge, in
    its capacity as "general contractor," contracted with plaintiff
    Henkels & McCoy in December of 1988. Henkels
    commenced its work at the Chestnut Woods site on
    January 16, 1989, shortly after Red Hawk received the first
    payment on the return of its capital contribution to the
    Timber Knoll joint venture.
    In January, April and July of 1989, Red Hawk's general
    partner made the decisions that gave rise to this lawsuit.
    When each return of capital from the Timber Knoll project
    was received, G&A decided to deposit a few thousand
    dollars in Red Hawk's checking account to cover
    anticipated administrative expenses and to return the
    remainder to the limited partners. Henkels seeks to compel
    return of those distributions to Red Hawk for application to
    a default judgment it later obtained against Red Hawk.
    During the period from January to August 1989, Red
    Hawk had satisfied its entire capital commitment to the
    Chestnut Woods joint venture, and it had no significant
    liabilities of any kind. It was receiving reports from Cedar
    Ridge that site improvements, after some initial delays,
    were progressing. Cedar Ridge estimated at the start of this
    period (i.e., December 1988) that, even without
    improvements, the entire property could be sold for
    approximately $78,000 per lot, i.e., $1.8 million. At the end
    of this period (i.e., August 1989), the Chestnut Woods
    29
    project was appraised at $2.7 million. It is undisputed that
    Red Hawk had significant net worth throughout this period.
    The district court found it significant that Red Hawk and
    its partners understood that site improvements were on-
    going during the period from January to July 1989 and
    that the Chestnut Woods joint venture was, accordingly,
    incurring liabilities. It did not find, however, that this joint
    venture was insolvent during this period. To the contrary,
    the record relevant to this period indicates that the
    liabilities of the Chestnut Woods joint venture did not
    exceed $1.7 million, that it thus remained solvent, and that
    trade creditors were being paid on a current basis. In
    particular, all invoices that were submitted to Cedar Ridge
    by Henkels during this period were paid in full.
    New Jersey's Uniform Limited Partnership Law provides
    that a partner may not receive a distribution from a limited
    partnership "to the extent that, after giving effect to the
    distribution, all liabilities of the limited partnership, other
    than liabilities to partners on account of their partnership
    interests, exceed the fair value of the partnership assets."
    N.J. Stat. Ann. S 42:2A-45. This is the sole mandatory
    restriction in the law for the benefit of partnership creditors
    on distributions to partners. Any additional restriction for
    the benefit of creditors must thus be one voluntarily
    undertaken by the Red Hawk partners in their partnership
    agreement.
    Our court today holds that the Red Hawk partners,
    although mandating a pass-through to themselves of cash
    receipts, intended in Section 12(a) of their partnership
    agreement voluntarily to impose on themselves a very
    significant restriction for the benefit of joint venture
    creditors. This voluntary restriction, the court holds by
    necessary implication, was intended to be sufficiently broad
    that a distribution could not be made to Red Hawk partners
    unless cash reserves had been established to fund the
    payment of all anticipated future liabilities of the joint
    venture partnerships (owned in part by others) that might
    accrue over some unspecified period of time, even though
    those other partnerships were expected to pay their own
    liabilities with their own or borrowed funds. The record
    suggests no reason, however, why the partners, when
    30
    setting up the Red Hawk partnership, would have imposed
    such an unnecessary and ill-defined burden on themselves,
    and the text of Section 12(a) does not require such a
    conclusion that they did.
    The court resolves the central issue in this appeal in one
    sentence: Section 12(a)(iv) "of the Red Hawk partnership
    agreement specifically provided that cash receipts be used
    for the establishment of reasonable reserves (for creditors)
    before such receipts be distributed to the [limited
    partners]." Slip opinion at 10. Because Red Hawk's general
    partner had reason to believe that Henkels might submit
    invoices in the future for site improvement work, the court
    accordingly concludes that the three challenged
    distributions violated Section 12(a)(iv).
    In my view, the court errs for at least five reasons: (1) In
    context, Section 12(a)(iv) was intended for the protection of
    the limited partners, not as a creditor protection device
    even for creditors of Red Hawk; (2) Section 12(a)(iv), even if
    viewed as a creditor protection provision, was not intended
    for the protection of joint venture creditors for whom the
    joint ventures were to make other provision; (3) the
    challenged distributions were a return of capital that the
    partners had agreed to devote to an abandoned venture,
    and it is not reasonable to find an intent in Section 12(a)(iv)
    to commit that capital contribution to the creditors of a
    different, fully capitalized venture; (4) Section 12(a)(iv)
    permits the general partner to retain reserves only from
    "Cash Receipts derived from the operations of the Property"
    and the challenged distributions did not come from funds
    generated by operations;1 and (5) even if Section 12(a)(iv)
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. The district court correctly found that the three payments
    representing a return of the capital committed to the Timber Knoll joint
    venture did not constitute a "cash receipt from the operations of the
    Property." It inexplicably concluded from this, however, that the general
    partner was thus "plainly obligated" to follow the terms of Section
    12(a)(iv) and establish a reserve for anticipated future liabilities to
    Henkels. At the time the Red Hawk partnership agreement was
    negotiated, the parties were not, of course, anticipating the
    abandonment of the Timber Knoll venture, and the"notwithstanding"
    clause does not literally read as applying to a return of capital that
    does
    31
    could reasonably be read to require Red Hawk's general
    partner to set aside funds for creditors in Henkels' position
    whenever a reasonable general partner exercising business
    judgment would do so, this record provides no basis for a
    conclusion that the failure of Red Hawk's general partner to
    set aside funds for Henkels in January through July of
    1989 was a decision beyond the bounds of business
    judgment.
    I would reverse and remand with instructions to enter
    judgment for the defendants.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    _________________________________________________________________
    not result from a sale of the joint venture property. Nevertheless, I
    believe the intent behind the provision governing such sales, and the
    provisions strictly limiting the objectives of the partnership to
    participation in specified joint ventures with specified capitalization,
    required a pass-through of the payments from the Timber Knoll joint
    venture. But whether or not this is the case, Ifind no authority in the
    agreement for the establishment of reserves other than out of operating
    revenues.
    32