Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 2021
DocketG058893
StatusUnpublished

This text of Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3 (Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/5/21 Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

JOHN A. BELCHER,

Petitioner and Appellant, G058893

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2018-01018203)

MICHAEL Y.C. BAKKERS, OPINION

Objector and Respondent.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Jacki C. Brown, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of John A. Belcher and John A. Belcher for Petitioner and Appellant. No appearance by Objector and Respondent. This appeal concerns John A. Belcher’s petition for payment of attorney fees and reimbursement of costs from Paul Bakkers’ estate (Estate). For three years, 1 Belcher rendered legal services to Paul, and others in the Bakkers family, in litigation involving assets held in a family trust (Trust). Belcher asserts the probate court erroneously determined he must file a creditor’s claim against the Estate and improperly denied his petition for attorney fees. We affirm the court’s order. FACTS Paul and his wife, Joan Bakkers, hired Belcher to litigate a lawsuit they filed against their son, Michael Bakkers. The retainer agreement, dated January 26, 2016, stated the parties agreed Belcher would represent Paul, Joan, and their daughter Gaby Bakkers “as Trustees of the Bakkers Living Trust,” in an action against Michael, his company Southwest Credit Company, and his girlfriend Linh Nguyen. In the lawsuit, Paul and Joan alleged Michael was liable for financial elder abuse and other claims based on their belief he gained access to their finances and stole from them. (Bakkers v. Bakkers (Jan. 24, 2019, G054865) [nonpub. opn.] (Bakkers I).) In addition, they alleged Michael wrongfully designated himself as a joint tenant on the grant deed of their primary residence, located on Juanita Way in Placentia (Juanita Property). Michael used the property as security for a $700,000 loan, placing a lien on the Juanita Property. (Bakkers I, supra, G054865.). Paul and Joan owned an investment property located on Whitman Drive in Placentia (Whitman Property), and they alleged Michael wrongfully forced Joan to withdraw $375,000 cash to purchase the property from another son, Andrew Bakkers, when the home was going into foreclosure. (Bakkers I, supra, G054865.) Michael and Nguyen recorded a $375,000 deed of trust against the Whitman Property. The Juanita Property and the Whitman Property were included on the Trust’s schedule of assets. 1 For the sake of clarity and to avoid confusion, we refer to members of the Bakkers family by their first names.

2 Relevant to this appeal, the retainer agreement contained the following fee provision: “The representation will be handled on a contingent fee basis with our fee being dependent upon recovery through settlement or trial . . . . Our fee will be equal to 40 [percent] of any ‘net recovery’ as hereafter defined. In addition to the percentages of cash as our fee, in the event of a success in removing liens or recovering title we will receive an additional fee. As an additional fee, we will receive $100,000 if [the Juanita Property] is deeded back to plaintiffs. In addition, we will receive $80,000 if the lien on [the Whitman Property] is released and title is restored to plaintiffs.” The agreement also specified the client would be responsible for all costs and expenses associated with litigation. Additionally, the parties agreed Belcher “shall have a lien for fees and costs” and the lien would attach to “any and all real property of the client, including any recovery the client may obtain . . . in this matter.” Neither Paul nor Joan survived the final resolution of their case. Joan died prior to prevailing at trial, and Paul died while the appeal was pending. After some delay, the probate court appointed a special administrator to represent the Estate on appeal. This court affirmed the judgment cancelling Michael’s joint tenancy claim to the Juanita Property, restoring title to the Trust, and cancelling the $700,000 lien. We also affirmed the court’s ruling to restore the entire Whitman Property to the Trust, without any liens. (Bakkers I, supra, G054865.) Because it is relevant to this appeal, we will briefly digress to discuss facts relating to the special administrator. After Paul passed away, we gave Belcher time to file a party substitution motion. We denied Belcher’s first motion to substitute Gaby as respondent in place of Paul because counsel failed to comply with Code of Civil Procedure section 337.32. (Bakkers v. Bakkers (July 17, 2018, G054865) [nonpub. order].) Despite being given 60 days, Belcher failed to file a party substitution motion and this court held oral argument. (Bakkers v. Bakkers (Sept. 19, 2018, G054865) [nonpub. order].)

3 Before we filed the opinion in Bakkers I, counsel filed a request for judicial notice “of the probate court’s order appointing Robert M. Newell, Jr., as special administrator ‘limited to the pending appeal litigation for purposes of standing.’” (Bakkers I, supra, G054865.) As noted in our prior opinion, the probate court cautioned, “‘These Special Letters do not extend beyond the powers needed to represent the estate in the pending appeal[]’” and the letters expired at the conclusion of the appeal. (Ibid.) As part of our written opinion, we granted Belcher’s motion to substitute Newall as a party for Paul. (Bakkers I, G054865.) In February 2019, approximately one month after we issued the Bakkers I opinion, Belcher filed a “petition for approval and order for payment of attorney[] fees and reimbursement of costs[]” (Fee Petition). (Capitalization omitted.) Noticeably absent from the Fee Petition was any legal authority authorizing the probate court to pay Belcher’s attorney fees and costs. He requested $180,000 in attorney fees “as provided for in the retainer agreement, for successfully removing the fraudulent liens on the [Juanita and Whitman] Properties,” as well as $7,756.93 in costs and expenses incurred during the lawsuit. Belcher noted the request was reasonable because he spent over 700 hours on the case and he typically charged $500 per hour. Michael, as a self-represented litigant, filed an objection. He argued his 90- year-old parents lacked the mental capacity to enter into the contingency fee agreement. A few months later, Belcher filed a creditor’s claim for $190,715. The Judicial Council’s form requested facts supporting the claim. Belcher wrote that from January 2016 to January 2019, he was owed $180,000 in attorney fees pursuant to a contingency agreement. He calculated that from July 2014 through June 2018, he was owed $10,715 for “[c]osts accrued including court fees, depositions, [and] shipping costs[.]” He served a copy of the creditor’s claim to Newell by mail.

4 At the hearing on the Fee Petition, Belcher submitted evidence showing he and his associate spent over 700 hours working on the case and the appeal. On the second day of the hearing, the probate court stopped the proceedings and, on its own motion, set an order to show cause (OSC) “against the petitioner for failing to comply with the mandatory statutory procedures for a creditor’s claim in a probate proceeding.” In its written order, the court noted Michael, a self-represented litigant, did not know how to file a demurrer to the improper Fee Petition. The court explained Belcher failed to address “the obvious anomaly that this request for attorney[] fees stemmed from a civil lawsuit fully litigated before Paul[’s] . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belcher-v-bakkers-ca43-calctapp-2021.