Bruce v. Roberts

2016 COA 182, 421 P.3d 1199
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 2016
Docket15CA1824
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 COA 182 (Bruce v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruce v. Roberts, 2016 COA 182, 421 P.3d 1199 (Colo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2016COA182

Court of Appeals No. 15CA1824 Larimer County District Court No. 13PR30246 Honorable Devin R. Odell, Judge

Barry L. Bruce,

Attorney-Appellant,

v.

Jay A. Roberts and Ashley Roberts McNamara, as Co-Trustees of the Della I. Roberts Trust,

Petitioners-Appellees.

ORDER VACATED IN PART AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

Division III Opinion by JUDGE NAVARRO Webb and Hawthorne, JJ., concur

Announced December 15, 2016

Jackson Kelly PLLC, John S. Zakhem, John L. Skari, Jr., Benjamin Ross, Denver, Colorado, for Appellant

Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP, John M. Bowlin, Denver, Colorado, for Appellees ¶1 A Colorado court must award attorney fees against a party

who presents the court with a claim or defense lacking substantial

justification. § 13-17-102(2), C.R.S. 2016. But can a Colorado

court award fees under section 13-17-102 for an unjustified claim

presented to a foreign court?

¶2 This question is raised by appellant, Barry L. Bruce, an

attorney assessed with opposing counsels’ fees under section

13-17-102 for legal work performed in both the underlying Larimer

County estate matter and a collateral action in West Virginia.

Relying on the language of section 13-17-102 and Board of County

Commissioners v. Kraft Building Contractors, 122 P.3d 1019 (Colo.

App. 2005), Bruce argues that the district court lacked authority to

award attorney fees incurred solely in the West Virginia case.

Appellees, Jay A. Roberts and Ashley Roberts McNamara, respond

that In re Estate of Leslie, 886 P.2d 284, 288 (Colo. App. 1994),

supports the court’s award.

¶3 We conclude that Kraft properly applied the plain language of

section 13-17-102 and that Leslie is distinguishable. To the extent

that Leslie may conflict with our decision, however, we decline to

follow that case. Following Kraft instead, we vacate the district

1 court’s order as it pertains to attorney fees incurred in the West

Virginia action and remand for further proceedings.

I. Facts and Proceedings

¶4 In 1996, Della Roberts, assisted by her son James Roberts,

formed the Della I. Roberts Trust in Colorado, where she lived. She

died eight days later.

¶5 Upon Della’s death, James, the designated trustee, was

supposed to divide the trust’s assets into two equal shares. The

first share was intended to benefit James and his wife, Mary Sue

Roberts. The second share was intended to benefit Della’s

grandchildren, the children of James and Mary Sue. The trust

instrument further provided that James was to distribute to Della’s

grandchildren “at least monthly and in equal amounts, all of the net

income from their trust share.”

¶6 James did not properly administer the trust. Apparently,

however, no one expressed concern over his administration until

after he died in October 2012. Upon his death, Mary Sue assumed

the role of trustee pursuant to the trust’s provisions. As such, she

was supposed to distribute equally all principal remaining from the

trust’s second share to Della’s grandchildren. But a majority of the

2 grandchildren promptly removed Mary Sue as trustee (as permitted

by the trust instrument), citing concerns that trust assets had

already been squandered and she might not properly distribute any

remaining assets. These grandchildren then sought the trust’s

financial records and a corporate fiduciary willing to assume the

role of trustee.

¶7 Unable to obtain either the financial records or a willing

corporate fiduciary, two grandchildren — Jay A. Roberts and Ashley

Roberts McNamara — brought this probate action on behalf of the

trust. (We will refer to them as “trustees” because they were

ultimately appointed trustees.) Their initial petition sought an

order appointing a successor trustee. They then sought the records

necessary to complete a historical accounting for the trust, marshal

and distribute the remaining assets, and finally dissolve the trust.

¶8 Mary Sue objected to the petition on jurisdictional grounds.

Citing her and James’s move from Colorado to West Virginia in

1999, she argued that West Virginia courts had exclusive

jurisdiction over the trust. In June 2013, the district court rejected

the jurisdictional challenge and concluded that Larimer County,

Colorado, was the appropriate venue.

3 ¶9 Meanwhile, Mary Sue filed a separate case in West Virginia

state court. She asked that court to assume jurisdiction over the

trust, and she sought (among other things) a temporary restraining

order and an injunction to prevent dissolution of the trust.

Trustees removed the case to the federal district court in West

Virginia. After a hearing, the federal court dismissed the West

Virginia action in November 2013, concluding that “jurisdiction over

the trust is properly in Colorado.” Mary Sue appealed this decision

to the Fourth Circuit but then voluntarily dismissed her appeal.

The record does not reveal whether trustees sought an attorney fees

award from the federal courts in the West Virginia action. On

appeal, Bruce asserts that trustees did not apply for fees in the

federal courts; trustees have not disputed his assertion.

¶ 10 Back in Colorado, the district court accepted a final

accounting of the trust filed by trustees, ordered all assets

remaining in the trust be distributed to the grandchildren in equal

shares, and found that the trust could recover administrative costs

and attorney fees incurred in litigating both the Colorado and West

Virginia cases, pursuant to section 13-17-102.

4 ¶ 11 Bruce represented Mary Sue in both the Colorado and West

Virginia matters. The district court awarded attorney fees for the

Colorado matter ($7325) in favor of the trust and against both

Bruce and Mary Sue’s local counsel, jointly and severally. The

court assessed fees against Bruce for the West Virginia action

($54,565).

II. Analysis

¶ 12 Bruce appeals the district court’s order only as it pertains to

attorney fees awarded for the West Virginia action. He contends

that section 13-17-102 did not authorize the court to award

attorney fees incurred solely in the West Virginia case.1 Based on

the plain language of the statute, Bruce is right, except to the

extent that trustees used in this case any work product created for

the West Virginia federal action. Because the record does not reveal

whether they did so, further proceedings are necessary to address

1 Bruce seems to present two claims in his opening brief: (1) the district court lacked authority to impose fees incurred in the West Virginia case and (2) the court did not conduct the proper inquiry to determine the amount of the award. He acknowledges in his reply brief, however, that “[t]he only issue before this Court is whether the Trial Court has jurisdiction to award attorneys’ fees billed in a case before the Federal District Court of the Southern District of West Virginia.”

5 this exception. For these reasons, we vacate the order in part and

remand for resolution of this question.

A. Relevant Law and Standard of Review

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Related

Roberts v. Bruce
2018 CO 58 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
2016 COA 182, 421 P.3d 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-v-roberts-coloctapp-2016.