Clemmye Berger v. Brenda O'Brien v. Sylvia Berger

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 30, 2000
DocketW1999-00861-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Clemmye Berger v. Brenda O'Brien v. Sylvia Berger (Clemmye Berger v. Brenda O'Brien v. Sylvia Berger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clemmye Berger v. Brenda O'Brien v. Sylvia Berger, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON August 30, 2000 Session

CLEMMYE MULLENIX BERGER v. BRENDA O’BRIEN, ET AL. v. SYLVIA GALASSI BERGER, ET AL.

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. 103618-3 D.J. Alissandratos, Chancellor

No. W1999-00861-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 11, 2001

This case involves the settlement of an estate. After the estate was settled, the trial court assessed a portion of the fees and expenses of the guardian ad litem and the attorney ad litem as costs against an intervening defendant and beneficiary of the estate. The intervening defendant appealed the assessment of these expenses to this Court. On appeal, we affirm the decision of the trial court, finding that the trial court was within its discretion to assess a portion of the fees and expenses of the guardian ad litem and attorney ad litem against the intervening defendant as discretionary costs.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

Michael F. Pleasants, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Morris Jack Berger, Sr.

Louis R. Lucas,Carl Langschmidt, Jr., Parke S. P. Morris, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellees, Brenda O’Brien, Executrix of the Estate of Louis Jack Berger, Pancho’s Management, Inc., Pancho’s Mexican Foods, Inc., Harold Walter, Guardian Ad Litem, and Patrick Ardis, Attorney Ad Litem.

Richard M. Carter, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Sylvia Galassi Berger, Natural Guardian and Testamentary Trustee of Bianca Berger.

Stevan L. Black, Vickie Hardy Jones, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Sylvia Berger, in her individual capacity.

OPINION

This estate case has a long and somewhat convoluted history. The decedent, Louis Jack Berger (“Decedent”), died on June 19, 1993. His will was admitted to probate in Shelby County Probate Court on June 23, 1993. Pursuant to the will, Brenda Berger O’Brien, the Decedent’s sister, was named Executrix of the Decedent’s estate. The estate’s largest asset was the Decedent’s stock in Pancho’s Mexican Restaurants, Inc. (“Pancho’s”). His will divided the stock as follows: 47.5% to his daughter, Bianca Berger; 20% to his son, Morris Jack Berger, Sr.; 5% to his grandson, Morris Jack Berger, Jr.; and 27.5% to his sister, Brenda O’Brien (“Executrix”).

On December 23, 1993, Sylvia Galassi Berger, the Decedent’s former wife and the mother of the Decedent’s daughter, Bianca Berger, filed a claim against the estate for continuing alimony pursuant to a marital dissolution agreement executed prior to the Decedent’s death. The Executrix filed an exception to Sylvia Berger’s claim. On March 16, 1994, Morris Jack Berger, Sr. and Sylvia Berger jointly filed a petition to remove Brenda O’Brien as Executrix of the estate. After eight days of hearings, on November 22, 1994, the Probate Court entered an order denying their petition, and Brenda O’Brien remained Executrix of the estate. On October 3, 1997, the Probate Court rendered a decision in favor of Sylvia Berger on her claim for alimony, awarding her $383,212.80.

Meanwhile, on December 3, 1993, another lawsuit was filed against the estate in Shelby County Chancery Court. The lawsuit was filed by Clemmye Mullenix Berger1, founder of Pancho’s and the mother of Decedent and Executrix. This lawsuit alleged that Decedent had fraudulently induced his mother into transferring her Pancho’s stock to him before his death. Sylvia Berger and Morris Jack Berger, Sr. intervened in this lawsuit as defendants. On August 7, 1995, the Chancery Court appointed a guardian ad item to represent the interests of the Decedent’s minor daughter, Bianca Berger, and it appointed an attorney ad litem to assist the guardian ad litem. In February 1997, after consultation between the Probate and Chancery Courts, it was agreed that the Chancery Court should assume jurisdiction over the settlement of the Decedent’s estate. Orders were issued permitting the Chancery Court to sit as a probate court by interchange.

Settling the estate proved difficult. While the estate had considerable assets, there were not sufficient liquid assets to pay the claims against the estate. The estate had over $900,000 in claims against it, including Sylvia Berger’s claim for alimony, federal and state taxes, and child support for Bianca Berger. In January 1997, the Guardian Ad Litem proposed an initial plan to settle the estate. The parties negotiated, and the Chancery Court held hearings on the proposed settlement in March 1997 and in May 1998. These proceedings culminated in a plan providing that the estate would sell 51% of the stock in Pancho’s to a limited liability company, Berger Family, LLC, for $450,000. The Berger Family, LLC agreed to assume certain liabilities of the estate, including the payment of Sylvia Berger’s claim, child support payments for Bianca Berger, and federal and state taxes. The Berger Family, LLC is comprised of some members of the Berger family but does not include Morris Jack Berger, Sr. On June 10, 1998, the Chancery Court entered an order approving the plan, over the objections of Morris Jack Berger, Sr. Morris Jack Berger, Sr. then appealed the settlement of the estate to this Court.

After approval of the settlement plan, the Guardian Ad Litem and Attorney Ad Litem filed a motion in Chancery Court seeking to assess a portion of their fees and expenses against Appellant,

1 On January 10, 200 0, Clemm ye Mullenix Berger’s a ttorney filed no tice with this Court that she had died. To date, no pa rty has been su bstituted for he r in this appea l.

-2- Morris Jack Berger, Sr. It is undisputed that the Guardian Ad Litem had fees and expenses totaling $108,752.53, which included the fees of the Attorney Ad Litem. Sylvia Berger, Clemmye Berger, and Pancho’s agreed to pay $98,800.00, leaving a balance of $9,952.53. The Guardian Ad Litem and Attorney Ad Litem asserted that the participation in the proceedings of Appellant Morris Jack Berger, Sr., seeking to remove Brenda O’Brien as Executrix and opposing the settlement plan, necessitated much of the fees and expenses they incurred.

After a hearing, the Chancery Court ruled that Appellant Morris Jack Berger, Sr. should be required to pay $9,952.53 toward the fees and expenses of the Guardian Ad Litem and the Attorney Ad Litem. In oral remarks from the bench, later incorporated into a written ruling, the Chancellor stated:

Litigation by its very nature has a cost, an economic cost. The question before the Court is, when one has a matter in controversy that they are a party to, and a ward of the Court is involved, whether that ward be a person who is mentally incompetent or whether it be a person who is a minor, the question then comes, can the Court lawfully dispose of a ward’s interest without having that ward represented, and the answer is no.

Is that not only for the benefit of the ward but also for the benefit of the other litigants, yes, because unless someone has a valid, enforceable final decree, whether it be in their favor or not, there is no final resolution of their dispute such that it would not be subject to attack. . . .

In this particular instance, this was not merely litigation. It was purely consoled for the benefit of this ward’s estate. This affected every single person in that family. The family members very vigorously participated in this matter during the numerous proceedings before this Court. . . .

[I]s it unreasonable that someone who is perhaps against their will the defendant but nevertheless affected by the litigation and ultimately the beneficiary of the finality of that litigation, therefore, the certainty that they don’t have to face it all over again in some fashion.

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Bluebook (online)
Clemmye Berger v. Brenda O'Brien v. Sylvia Berger, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clemmye-berger-v-brenda-obrien-v-sylvia-berger-tennctapp-2000.