Question A. Charlie owned and operated an auto parts junkyard in Utah. Charlie's son, Max, started working in the business part-time as a child and full-time when he left school at the age of sixteen. Max oversaw the business's finances, depositing the profits in a bank. Charlie gave Max a 1/2 interest in the business, telling him that if anything ever happened to Charlie, the entire business would be in Max's hands. In 2019, Charlie and his wife, Allie, transferred to Max the land on which the junkyard was located. Two years later, however, Allie and her two daughters falsely convinced Charlie, whose mental competence had deteriorated, that Max had cheated him in business. Max was ordered off the land. Shortly thereafter, Charlie died. Max filed a suit in a Utah state court against the rest of the family, asserting that he and Charlie had been partners and that he was entitled to Charlie's share of the business. Was the relationship between Charlie and Max a partnership? Is Max entitled to Charlie's share? Explain in detail. I will be looking for a very thorough legal analysis.