The first part seeks an accounting of the partnership funds and assets and payment to the plaintiffs of their share. The partnership agreement was allegedly made orally in 1998 and dissolution occurred in 2002. Much of the evidence in relation to this claim is likely to be found in the books and records of the partnership. As noted by Rooke J., as he then was, in Cooke v. Calgary Civic Employees Benefit Society [2003] A.J. no. 1725 at para. 32, it is the memory of what happened in relation to matters that aren’t otherwise documented that is important. In this case, documentation will form the foundation of the lawsuit.
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