Sproule v. Johnson , 2022 ND 51 ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                     FILED
    IN THE OFFICE OF THE
    CLERK OF SUPREME COURT
    MARCH 17, 2022
    STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA
    
    2022 ND 51
    Susan Sproule, Sandra Crary, and
    Lynnell Stegman,                                    Plaintiffs and Appellees
    v.
    Brian Johnson, Rodger Johnson, Lyle Johnson,
    New Partnership, and Nor-Agra, Inc.,             Defendants and Appellants
    and
    Al Johnson,                                                      Defendant
    No. 20210235
    Appeal from the District Court of Grand Forks County, Northeast Central
    Judicial District, the Honorable Donald Hager, Judge.
    AFFIRMED.
    Opinion of the Court by Crothers, Justice.
    Douglas A. Christensen (argued) and Joseph E. Quinn (on brief), Grand Forks,
    ND, for plaintiffs and appellees.
    Todd E. Zimmerman (argued) and Abigale R. Griffin (on brief), Fargo, ND, and
    Joseph A. Turman (appeared) Fargo, ND, for defendants and appellants Brian
    Johnson, Rodger Johnson, Lyle Johnson, New Partnership, and Nor-Agra, Inc.
    Sproule, et al. v. Johnson, et al.
    No. 20210235
    Crothers, Justice.
    [¶1] Brian Johnson, Rodger Johnson, Lyle Johnson, New Partnership and
    Nor-Agra, Inc. (Defendants) appeal from an amended judgment dissolving the
    Johnson Farms partnership. The Defendants argue the district court erred in
    its valuation and distribution of the partnership’s assets. We affirm.
    I
    [¶2] Brothers Bert and Lyle Johnson formed the Johnson Farms partnership
    in 1974. Bert Johnson’s children, Susan Sproule, Sandra Crary, Lynnell
    Stegman and Al Johnson, later became partners. Lyle Johnson’s children,
    Brian Johnson and Rodger Johnson, also became partners.
    [¶3] Bert Johnson died in July 2014. In September 2014, Susan Sproule,
    Sandra Crary, Lynnell Stegman and Al Johnson gave the Defendants a written
    dissociation notice demanding withdrawal from the partnership and
    requesting distribution of assets. The Defendants did not respond to the
    dissociation notice, and Susan Sproule, Sandra Crary and Lynnell Stegman
    (Plaintiffs) sued for dissolution of the Johnson Farms partnership in October
    2016.
    [¶4] In April 2017, the parties’ attorneys executed and filed a joint statement
    of counsel stating the parties agreed to the dissolution of Johnson Farms. The
    statement indicated the parties reached agreements relating to the appraisal
    and distribution of Johnson Farms’ numerous assets, including crops, farm
    equipment and farmland. Following the joint statement of counsel, the
    Plaintiffs’ attorney drafted an “Agreement in Principal for the Dissolution of
    Johnson Farms,” which included more details on the appraisal and distribution
    of Johnson Farms’ assets. The agreement included a provision on the
    distribution of Johnson Farms’ indirect ownership interest in Shilo Farms, a
    Canadian entity. The agreement was unsigned; however, at a November 2017
    status conference, the Defendants’ attorney stated, “We had an Agreement in
    Principal, and we are sticking to it.” The Defendants’ attorney also asked the
    1
    district court to “give the agreement an opportunity to work the way it was
    intended.”
    [¶5] In reliance on the agreement in principal, the parties appraised the
    partnership’s assets, including farmland and Shilo. In December 2017, the
    district court ordered the division of the farmland between the parties, with
    the Plaintiffs receiving “Farm Groups Three and Four,” and the Defendants
    receiving “Farm Groups One and Two.” In May 2018, the court ordered the
    division of the partnership’s machinery and equipment.
    [¶6] Despite the joint statement of counsel and agreement in principal,
    disagreements remained over the valuation of the partnership’s assets and the
    disposition of Shilo Farms. At the July 2020 trial, the parties discussed the
    disposition of Shilo and presented evidence on its value. The Defendants relied
    on a 2017 appraisal of Shilo showing a value of $40,660,802 (CAD). The
    Defendants also submitted a letter from Shilo’s accounting firm discussing the
    tax consequences if Shilo’s assets were liquidated. The Plaintiffs submitted a
    2019 appraisal of Shilo showing a value of $59,072,389 (CAD).
    [¶7] After trial, the district court entered a judgment dissolving the
    partnership and distributing the assets among the parties. The court found the
    2017 balance sheet showed assets of $10,337,837. The court found each
    Plaintiff was due $1,292,230, each was already paid $802,741, and the balance
    due to each was $489,489. The court found the 2017 crop expenses paid in 2018
    was $693,584 and each Plaintiff ’s share was $86,698. The court found that
    under the April 1, 2017 appraisals of farmland, the Lyle Johnson family
    defendants received farmland valued at $56,648,543.55. The Bert Johnson
    family plaintiffs received farmland valued at $56,387,904.40. The court
    awarded each Plaintiff $32,580 to make up the difference.
    [¶8] The district court found the 2019 appraisal of Shilo was more accurate
    than the 2017 appraisal because the Plaintiffs continued to contribute capital
    and pay tax on undistributed income resulting in the growth and increased
    productivity of Shilo from 2017 to 2019. The court found Shilo’s total value was
    $59,072,389 (CAD), or $47,257,911 (US). As part of the partnership’s
    2
    dissolution the court ordered Lyle, Rodger and Brian Johnson to pay each
    Plaintiff $5,316,515 (US) for their indirect interest in Shilo. The court did not
    deduct taxes from the amount awarded to the Plaintiffs for their interests in
    Shilo.
    II
    [¶9] We have explained our standard of review in an appeal from a bench
    trial:
    “In an appeal from a bench trial, the district court’s findings
    of fact are reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard of
    review, and its conclusions of law are fully reviewable. A finding of
    fact is clearly erroneous if it is induced by an erroneous view of the
    law, if there is no evidence to support it, or if, after reviewing all of
    the evidence, this Court is convinced a mistake has been made. In
    a bench trial, the district court is the determiner of credibility
    issues and we will not second-guess the district court on its
    credibility determinations. Findings of the trial court are
    presumptively correct.”
    Gimbel v. Magrum, 
    2020 ND 181
    , ¶ 5, 
    947 N.W.2d 891
     (cleaned up).
    III
    [¶10] The Defendants argue the district court erred by dissolving Johnson
    Farms. They claim the court should have dissociated the Plaintiffs from the
    partnership without winding up the partnership’s business.
    [¶11] Dissolution and winding up of partnership business is governed by
    N.D.C.C. ch. 45-20. Chapter 45-19, N.D.C.C., governs the dissociation of a
    partner when a partnership’s business is not wound up.
    [¶12] In its April 2021 findings of fact, conclusions of law and order for
    judgment, the district court explained why this action was for the dissolution
    of Johnson Farms:
    “Defendants argue post-trial this matter should be resolved
    as a partnership dissociation, pursuant to NDCC Chapter 45-19.
    3
    The court finds that this action is a dissolution, and not a
    dissociation, as evidenced by the actions, inactions, and
    agreements of the parties. The Complaint requests relief for
    dissolution, the Agreement in Principal and the Joint Statement
    of Counsel all identify this matter as one for dissolution. The court
    made such a ruling in its Order Granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for an
    Order Directing Division of Farm Real Property, Document No. 34,
    filed December 1, 2017, in which the court at ¶ 5, stated, ‘[t]he
    Court finds dissolution has been commenced for Johnson farms, a
    general partnership, pursuant to N.D.C.C., Section 45-20-01.’ The
    Defendants did not appeal that order, nor seek any injunctive relief
    or writ to prohibit the dissolution process.
    ....
    “The parties, by and through their attorneys, agreed to dissolve the
    existing Johnson Farms partnership, and prepared to do so by
    forming the ‘New Partnership.’ Thus, the partnership agreement
    cannot violate the statutory rights of partners to dissolve an
    existing arrangement, despite a constricted reading of the
    agreement’s terms. NDCC § 45-18-02(1); NDCC § 45-13-03(2)(f).
    “Had this matter been a disassociation and not a dissolution,
    Defendants Lyle, Rodger and Brian for Johnson Farms failed to
    comply with statutory requirements, and within 120 days after a
    written demand for payment, to pay cash to the dissociated
    Plaintiff partners, in [an] amount estimated to be the buyout price
    and accrued interest, pursuant to NDCC, Section 45-19-01(5). . . .
    There were no actions taken by the Defendants to follow the
    requirements of dissociation—no liquidation or going concern
    appraisals, or any money paid, or statutory statement given to the
    Plaintiffs.”
    [¶13] The Johnson Farms partnership agreement states the “partnership may
    be terminated by operation of law.” The Plaintiffs and Al Johnson began the
    process in September 2014 when they provided written notice of their
    dissociation within 90 days of Bert Johnson’s death. See N.D.C.C. § 45-20-
    01(2)(a) (providing for dissolution of a partnership when at least half of the
    remaining partners express their will to wind up the partnership business
    within 90 days of a partner’s dissociation by death). After the Plaintiffs sued
    4
    for dissolution, the joint statement of counsel provided “[t]he Parties have
    agreed that Johnson Farms, a North Dakota general partnership, should be
    dissolved, its activities wound-up, it debts and obligations discharged and
    remaining assets should be distributed to the members of the Bert Johnson
    Family and the Lyle Johnson Family.”
    [¶14] The Defendants sought dissociation under N.D.C.C. ch. 45-19 after trial
    and more than six years after the initial notice for dissolution. Despite their
    eleventh-hour request for dissociation, the Defendants failed to comply with
    the statutory requirements of N.D.C.C. ch. 45-19 to purchase the Plaintiffs’
    partnership interests. The district court relied on the parties’ statements and
    representations during this action and did not clearly err by finding this action
    was for the dissolution of the Johnson Farms partnership.
    [¶15] The Defendants also contend the district court erred by combining the
    remedies of dissolution and dissociation in this action. The Defendants argue
    the court employed a dissociation remedy by ordering a buyout of the Plaintiffs’
    indirect interests in Shilo. See N.D.C.C. § 45-19-01(2) (providing for a buyout
    of a dissociated partner’s interest when partnership business is not wound up).
    [¶16] Johnson Farms owned an indirect interest in Shilo. Johnson Farms
    owned J.F. Johnson Farm Co. Ltd., a Canadian entity. J.F. Johnson Farm owns
    fifty percent of Shilo’s stock. Nor-Agra, Inc., a North Dakota corporation, also
    owns fifty percent of Shilo’s stock. The Plaintiffs and Rodger Johnson, Brian
    Johnson and Al Johnson are Nor-Agra shareholders. Thus, the parties
    indirectly own Shilo through Nor-Agra and J.F. Johnson Farm.
    [¶17] Although the district court ordered a buyout of the Plaintiffs’ indirect
    interests in Shilo, the agreement in principal provided that either the Plaintiffs
    or Defendants should own all of Shilo’s stock. The trial testimony established
    the Plaintiffs and Defendants did not get along and did not want to continue
    their business relationship. The court could have distributed the J.F. Johnson
    Farm stock among the parties to complete the dissolution of Johnson Farms.
    See N.D.C.C. § 45-20-03(3) (providing for the distribution of a partnership’s
    assets during the winding up of a partnership’s business). However, the parties
    5
    would have remained shareholders of J.F. Johnson Farm and indirect owners
    of Shilo, which they expressly did not want. Additionally, the parties’ attorneys
    stated at trial they were not in favor of a stock distribution because of the
    potential tax consequences in Canada.
    [¶18] When supervising a partnership’s dissolution, “the district court acts as
    a court of equity, giving it the discretion to determine what is fair and equitable
    under the circumstances.” Puklich v. Puklich, 
    2019 ND 154
    , ¶ 24, 
    930 N.W.2d 593
    . Here, the Defendants have failed to show the court abused its discretion
    by doing what was fair and equitable under the circumstances. The buyout of
    the Plaintiffs’ indirect interests in Shilo satisfied the parties’ request to sever
    their business relationship. The court did not err by ordering a buyout of the
    Plaintiffs’ indirect interests in Shilo to complete the dissolution of Johnson
    Farms.
    IV
    [¶19] The defendants argue the district court erred in its valuation of Shilo.
    They assert the court was required to consider taxes in calculating the
    Plaintiffs’ buyout of their Shilo interests. The Defendants also claim the court
    erred in valuing Shilo on the basis of the 2019 appraisal instead of the 2017
    appraisal.
    [¶20] “Valuation is a question of fact.” Puklich, 
    2019 ND 154
    , ¶ 8. We presume
    a district court’s valuations are correct, and a valuation within the range of
    evidence presented at trial is not clearly erroneous. 
    Id.
    A
    [¶21] The Defendants assert the district court was required to consider taxes
    in valuing the Plaintiffs’ indirect interests in Shilo.
    [¶22] The district court did not consider taxes in its valuation of Shilo and did
    not deduct taxes from Shilo’s gross value when calculating the Plaintiffs’
    indirect interests in Shilo. The court found the agreement in principal “called
    for valuation without a discount.” The court addressed the Defendants’ letter
    6
    from Shilo’s accounting firm discussing the tax implications if Shilo’s assets
    were liquidated. The court found the Defendants’ position on taxes was
    speculative because Rodger Johnson testified there were no immediate plans
    to liquidate Shilo’s assets.
    [¶23] The Defendants cite to cases holding taxes should be considered when
    valuing a corporation. See, e.g., Daniels v. Holtz, 
    794 N.W.2d 813
    , 819 (Iowa
    2010) (concluding an appraisal of a corporation could factor in capital gains tax
    liability when the corporation was to be sold at a sheriff's sale); Estate of Jelke
    v. Comm’r, 
    507 F.3d 1317
    , 1319 (11th Cir. 2007) (holding that for purposes of
    estate tax determination, decedent’s minority interest in a closely held
    corporation should be discounted for potential capital gains tax liability under
    the arbitrary assumption that the corporation is liquidated on the date of death
    and all assets sold); Eisenberg v. Comm’r, 
    155 F.3d 50
    , 59 (2nd Cir. 1998)
    (concluding value of corporate stock could be reduced, for gift tax purposes, by
    a corporation’s potential capital gains tax liabilities).
    [¶24] The cases cited by the Defendants do not establish the district court’s
    decision to exclude taxes was induced by an erroneous view of the law. This
    case does not involve a sale of corporate assets or the valuation of corporate
    stock for estate or gift tax purposes. The court found the Defendants’ evidence
    relating to taxes was speculative because there were no immediate plans to
    liquidate Shilo’s assets. After reviewing the record, we are not left with a
    definite and firm conviction the court made a mistake by excluding taxes. The
    court did not clearly err by excluding taxes in its valuation of the Plaintiffs’
    indirect interests in Shilo.
    B
    [¶25] The Defendants contend the district court erred by using the 2019 Shilo
    appraisal instead of the 2017 appraisal. The Defendants assert the agreement
    in principal called for the use of the 2017 appraisal of Shilo.
    [¶26] “A district court’s findings on valuation of property will not be reversed
    unless they are clearly erroneous.” Puklich, 
    2019 ND 154
    , ¶ 8. A court’s finding
    7
    on valuation is not clearly erroneous if it falls within the range of evidence
    presented at trial. 
    Id.
    [¶27] The district court found the 2019 appraisal of Shilo was a more accurate
    and fair determination of Shilo’s value. The court found the Plaintiffs
    continued their indirect ownership in Shilo through the trial. The court found
    the Plaintiffs continued to “pay tax on their share of the earnings and which
    Shilo retained, without making any distributions” to the Plaintiffs. The court
    found “Shilo’s financial condition [since 2017] was significantly enhanced as a
    result [of] the Plaintiffs’ ownership and use of retained earnings to leverage its
    operations.” The court found:
    “The Defendants . . . used Plaintiffs’ income shares, after
    Plaintiffs paid tax on them, to greatly increase the Defendants’
    own equity in Shilo. The Plaintiffs are not donors; they were kept
    on as indirect owners, to their detriment, rather than the
    Defendants buying their shares earlier and discontinue allocating
    Shilo’s income to the Plaintiffs. The protracted delay in the
    litigation by the Defendants appears to be planned to build up
    Shilo at the Plaintiffs’ expense, but paying the Plaintiffs based on
    an earlier, less profitable and less valuable timeline which would
    have reflected a loss from the operations. . . . The court finds the
    2019 appraisals . . . and Shilo’s financial statements as of April 30,
    2019 are the fair barometer of Shilo’s value because the Plaintiffs
    continued to contribute, and pay tax, on undistributed income that
    resulted in the growth and increased productivity of Shilo.”
    [¶28] The agreement in principal contemplated using the 2017 appraisal of
    Shilo; however, the district court made findings and explained why the 2019
    appraisal was a more accurate and fair determination of Shilo’s value. See
    Puklich, 
    2019 ND 154
    , ¶ 24 (stating that in a proceeding for dissolution, a court
    has discretion to decide what is fair and equitable under the circumstances).
    Under the unique facts of this case, including the Defendants’ control of certain
    assets since the litigation began in 2016, the court did not err in valuing Shilo
    as of 2019.
    8
    V
    [¶29] The parties’ remaining arguments are either without merit or are not
    necessary to our decision. The judgment is affirmed.
    [¶30] Gerald W. VandeWalle
    Daniel J. Crothers, Acting C.J.
    Jerod E. Tufte
    Douglas A. Bahr, D.J.
    Bruce B. Haskell, S.J.
    [¶31] The Honorable Douglas A. Bahr, D.J., sitting in place of McEvers, J.,
    disqualified.
    [¶32] The Honorable Bruce B. Haskell, S.J., sitting in place of Jensen, C.J.,
    disqualified.
    9