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Pirrottina v Pirrottina [2024] NSWSC 558

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Manage episode 424043414 series 2953536
Content provided by James d'Apice. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by James d'Apice or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

“Our parents’ citrus farm is a partnership asset!”

___

Two siblings in partnership, P and D, ran a citrus farming business, having received it from their parents in the 2000s: [1]

(P, the parents’ exec, sought access to the parents’ privileged documents after death. As exec, P could waive privilege, however doing so was for themselves and not in the interests of the estate or benefs. Noting an exec’s duty to avoid conflict, access was denied: [4] - [10])

In the 1990s the parents gifted D the “Lot”, a part of the citrus farm: [29] - [31], [45], [50], [268]

In 1999, P bought a nearby farm with the parents providing both deposit and guarantee. P rented the house on the nearby farm out and continued to live with the parents at the citrus farm: [54], [60]

The orchards on the nearby farm were deployed in the parents’ business but there was no suggestion P’s nearby farm was a partnership asset: [55], [149]

In 2001, the parents gifted P and D the citrus farm and the business: [61], [62]

The farm was transferred before the commencement of P and D’s partnership and, being a gift, was not paid for with partnership funds: [142]

From around 2018 relations between D and P soured: [104] - [107]

As P’s nearby farm was not providing fruit for the partnership (and even though P continued to work for the partnership) payments to P were reduced: [121], [122]

Valuations were obtained as part of a potentially unwinding process. During this, P’s lawyer shared comments on a Deed (apparently made on P’s instructions) acknowledging P’s ownership of the Lot: [123]

P said that, in 2022, they attended D’s home to demand their share of partnership profits and were rebuffed. Police became involved and an AVO was obtained: [125], [126]

From around this time P was not paid by the partnership and did no further work for it: [129]

Shortly after this, P’s lawyer asserted the farm, including the Lot, was an asset of the partnership: [131]

The Court found the partnership ended on the date of the altercation, noting that from that time, P did no work and received no payment: [140]

P sought a declaration that the citrus farm, including the Lot, was a partnership asset: [141]

Although the evidence was imperfect, the Court was not convinced by P’s argument that the citrus farm was a partnership asset. This was based in part on its tax treatment via instructions given by P and D to an accountant over the years: [153]

P was found to have an equitable interest in the farm, namely in the Lot: [155] - [223]

The Court declined to make an s66G order and instead made a Woodson order, requiring P to offer their remaining interest in the farm to D at market value. If D was not willing or able to buy, a sale should proceed: [249]

___

Please give James d'Apice, Coffee and a Case Note and James' firm, Gravamen, a follow on your favourite platform!

www.gravamen.com.au

  continue reading

217 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 424043414 series 2953536
Content provided by James d'Apice. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by James d'Apice or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

“Our parents’ citrus farm is a partnership asset!”

___

Two siblings in partnership, P and D, ran a citrus farming business, having received it from their parents in the 2000s: [1]

(P, the parents’ exec, sought access to the parents’ privileged documents after death. As exec, P could waive privilege, however doing so was for themselves and not in the interests of the estate or benefs. Noting an exec’s duty to avoid conflict, access was denied: [4] - [10])

In the 1990s the parents gifted D the “Lot”, a part of the citrus farm: [29] - [31], [45], [50], [268]

In 1999, P bought a nearby farm with the parents providing both deposit and guarantee. P rented the house on the nearby farm out and continued to live with the parents at the citrus farm: [54], [60]

The orchards on the nearby farm were deployed in the parents’ business but there was no suggestion P’s nearby farm was a partnership asset: [55], [149]

In 2001, the parents gifted P and D the citrus farm and the business: [61], [62]

The farm was transferred before the commencement of P and D’s partnership and, being a gift, was not paid for with partnership funds: [142]

From around 2018 relations between D and P soured: [104] - [107]

As P’s nearby farm was not providing fruit for the partnership (and even though P continued to work for the partnership) payments to P were reduced: [121], [122]

Valuations were obtained as part of a potentially unwinding process. During this, P’s lawyer shared comments on a Deed (apparently made on P’s instructions) acknowledging P’s ownership of the Lot: [123]

P said that, in 2022, they attended D’s home to demand their share of partnership profits and were rebuffed. Police became involved and an AVO was obtained: [125], [126]

From around this time P was not paid by the partnership and did no further work for it: [129]

Shortly after this, P’s lawyer asserted the farm, including the Lot, was an asset of the partnership: [131]

The Court found the partnership ended on the date of the altercation, noting that from that time, P did no work and received no payment: [140]

P sought a declaration that the citrus farm, including the Lot, was a partnership asset: [141]

Although the evidence was imperfect, the Court was not convinced by P’s argument that the citrus farm was a partnership asset. This was based in part on its tax treatment via instructions given by P and D to an accountant over the years: [153]

P was found to have an equitable interest in the farm, namely in the Lot: [155] - [223]

The Court declined to make an s66G order and instead made a Woodson order, requiring P to offer their remaining interest in the farm to D at market value. If D was not willing or able to buy, a sale should proceed: [249]

___

Please give James d'Apice, Coffee and a Case Note and James' firm, Gravamen, a follow on your favourite platform!

www.gravamen.com.au

  continue reading

217 episodes

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