I'm involved in a four-way partnership and we decided to start a maintenance fund specifically for engine overhaul, no other maintenance. Right now all costs except fuel are split evenly four ways.
My questions are: if we sell the plane what normally happens in this situation? Should the money go back to the people who paid it (Jim gets $6k, John gets $2k etc...), or should the $10k be divided evenly among the partners?
The answer is, it depends.
It depends on how each partner bought into the partnership.
If a partner bought into a 1/4 share of a partnership based on the 1/4 share value the airplane PLUS a 1/4 share of the value of the engine fund (eg. plane worth 20k with 1800 hours on the engine and an engine fund in the bank worth 10K) then they should have ponied up 7,500.00 for their 1/4 share ownership. In this case if the airplane is sold, the value of the sale plus the engine fund should be merged together and divided by 4 and split among the partners.
Here's another example:
4 people buy an airplane worth $60,000 with a 0 time engine (Assume all other things being equal for this example regarding this airplane)
A new engine cost $25,000
The engine should be replaced at 2000 hours
Therefore, for every hour the plane is flown $12.50 should be put in an account for the engine overhaul ( probably more for the removal, reinstallation and it shipping it in 2 directions, but I digress)
For every hour the plane is flown, the value of the plane decreases by $12.50
The engine fund however increases by $12.50 making it a wash
Therefore, the value of the aircraft remains stationary between the value of the aircraft and the bank fund
You all own the aircraft equally
Therefore, when the aircraft is sold, the partners should divide everything equally.
It doesn't matter if one partner flew 1900 of those 2000 hours and the rest of the partners flew the remaining 100 hours. If the airplane has 2000 hours and there's 25,000 dollars in the bank account, the money should be divided equally if the plane is sold at that point.
If the plane reached 2000 hours and the new engine was indeed put on and the bank account was now 0, if the plane was sold the next day, you would all divide the money equally, right? It seems simple to me, at least in these examples.
Gene
with a 1/2 share in a '71 Cardinal RG with an engine at 1900 hrs. and an engine fund of $25,000...So I've been considering this quite a bit.
One last thing: it also depends heavily on how the Partnership Agreement was drafted between the partners.