Conservatorship and Estate of Bessard CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 2021
DocketA156773
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservatorship and Estate of Bessard CA1/2 (Conservatorship and Estate of Bessard CA1/2) 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
Conservatorship and Estate of Bessard CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 1/29/21 Conservatorship and Estate of Bessard CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

Conservatorship of the Person and Estate of ENEZ A. BESSARD.

JOSCELYN JONES, Petitioner and Appellant, A156773 v. GWENDOLYN A. SACCO, (San Francisco County Objector and Respondent. Super. Ct. No. PCN15298493)

Attorney Joscelyn Jones Torru (Jones) was appointed by the probate court to represent Enez Bessard, a 92-year-old woman who was the subject of an intra-family dispute over who should be her conservator. When Jones subsequently petitioned the probate court for attorney fees under Probate Code section 1472, the amount and reasonableness of her fee request became the subject of dispute. Jones requested attorney fees in the amount of $73,400; one of Bessard’s daughters filed an objection; and the probate court, after rounds of briefing and a hearing, awarded Jones $46,500, plus reimbursement of approximately $2,000 in costs. On appeal, Jones challenges the attorney fees part of the order as an abuse of discretion and

1 asks us to award her all of the attorney fees she requested. Because Jones has given us no basis to find error, we affirm.1 PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND In April 2015, pursuant to authority that permits it to appoint counsel (§ 1470), the probate court appointed Jones to represent Enez Bessard, described in the order of appointment as a “Proposed Conservatee.” At the time of Jones’s appointment and shortly thereafter, multiple competing pending petitions for conservatorship over Bessard had been filed by members of her family (daughters, some of whom were half-sisters, and a granddaughter). The petitions made accusations of wrongdoing by other petitioners. On August 27, 2015, Jones filed a petition recommending appointment of a private professional fiduciary conservator, Paula Bibbs. The petition described Bessard as diagnosed with dementia and other health problems, needing assistance with medications and activities of daily living, as well as “subject to fraud and undue influence” and requiring management, maintenance, and protection of her estate. The petition noted that due to conflict between Bessard’s adult children, “competing petitions” for appointment of conservator had been filed. On October 21, 2015, Jones filed a petition to have Bibbs named as temporary conservator in advance of the upcoming hearing on appointment of conservator, “due to worsening conflict and dissention [sic] among competing family members”; five competing petitions for conservator had been filed. The petition recommended that the court accept the resignation of Gwendolyn Sacco, one of Enez Bessard’s daughters, who had been acting as

1 All statutory references are to the Probate Code. All references to rules are to the California Rules of Court.

2 temporary conservator. The petition stated that “the actions of the temporary conservator have been detrimental to the conservatee’s mental, emotional and physical wellbeing,” and reported “continual complaints and reports of verbal abuse in and around proposed conservatee and current temporary conservator either initiates or fails to redirect these explosive episodes.” On October 27, 2015, the probate court granted the petition and entered an order appointing Bibbs as temporary conservator of the person and estate of Bessard and accepting Sacco’s resignation as temporary conservator. On November 19, 2015, Bibbs was appointed conservator of Bessard’s person and estate. In June 2016 (and as amended in August), Sacco filed a first and final account of temporary conservator, which included a request for approval of her fees as temporary conservator and fees for her counsel. Jones filed objections, including to the payment of attorney fees to Sacco’s attorneys other than during the period between February 18 and October 27, 2015, “whereby time was rendered for services that were not of benefit” to the conservatee’s person or estate “and/or [Sacco] was not serving in the capacity of conservator.” After briefing and hearing, the probate court (Judge Paul Alvarado) awarded fees to Sacco’s attorneys in the amount requested ($53,764.17) without reduction (Sacco Fee Order). The attorney hourly rates for time actually billed ranged from $350 to $375. In June 2018, Jones filed a petition for her own attorney fees as appointed counsel to Bessard. In a narrative format, she summarized the nature and extent of her work for Bessard, totaling 183.5 hours. She sought compensation at her “regular rate” of $400 per hour (noting that this was the

3 hourly billing rate of one of Sacco’s attorneys, Bruce Feder). Jones also attached detailed time records. In all, she requested $73,400 in attorney fees, plus expenses in the amount of $2,099.41. Jones characterized her legal representation for the conservatee as “complicated by unresolved family differences” among Bessard’s eight living children from two marriages, who were “unable or unwilling to [work] together . . . due to years of distrust and historical conflict with one another.” Jones noted that the conservatee’s estate was valued at $20,859.34, and that, in addition, Bessard owned a house in San Francisco with an estimated market value of more than $1 million, currently held in trust outside the conservatorship estate. Jones’s petition for attorney fees drew a sharp objection from Sacco, filed August 22, 2018. Sacco identified herself as the conservatee’s daughter, the former temporary conservator of the person and estate of Bessard, and current trustee of the Trust of Enez Anita Bessard. Sacco’s grounds for objection were detailed and many. She contended Jones had not acted in the best interests of the conservatee and accrued legal fees and costs that were unnecessary or wasteful. She objected that there was no agreement covering the terms of Jones’s representation and Jones should not be paid more than $325 per hour. She objected to charging for certain work, such as travel time. She contended that the hourly time recorded for certain legal services was unreasonable: meetings with the conservatee were twice the length they should have been given that conservatee could “at best” be in a conversation with Jones for 5 to 10 minutes before “becoming distracted or agitated”; fruitless time (16.5 hours and $6,600 in fees) was spent objecting to Sacco’s own first and final account of temporary conservator which was ultimately accepted without reduction by the probate court, suggesting that Jones’s

4 work was “neither necessary nor beneficial” to conservatee; and Jones took part in many meetings and communications with “multiple participants . . . and third parties” that were not necessary or in the best interests of the conservatee (29 such meetings were identified from Jones’s time records and disputed). Sacco’s objection was also supported by a declaration from her husband, George Sacco, disputing a time entry that pertained to him, and describing a confrontational conversation between himself and Jones.2 In all, Sacco challenged approximately $30,000 of the attorney fees and costs requested by Jones, and proposed an additional reduction of approximately $13,700 based on an hourly rate of $325 rather than $400. Sacco also noted the small size of the conservatorship estate, and that the conservatee’s monthly income was approximately $1,200. Jones filed a detailed declaration in response to Sacco’s objection on October 2, 2018.

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Conservatorship and Estate of Bessard CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-and-estate-of-bessard-ca12-calctapp-2021.