Conservatorship of Mouton CA2/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 12, 2013
DocketB241734
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservatorship of Mouton CA2/4 (Conservatorship of Mouton CA2/4) 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 of Mouton CA2/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 11/12/13 Conservatorship of Mouton CA2/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

Conservatorship of the Person and Estate of LOUIS MOUTON, JR. B241734 CRAIG A. SMITH, as Conservator, (Los Angeles County etc., Super. Ct. No. BP115583)

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

SANDRA N. BALDONADO,

Objector and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Thomas C. Falls, Judge. Affirmed. Keith S. Walker for Petitioner and Appellant. Robert L. Kern and Russell A. Dalton, Jr., for Objector and Respondent. In the underlying action, the probate court appointed respondent Sandra N. Baldonado under Evidence Code section 730 to evaluate the interests of Louis Mouton, Jr., regarding whom appellant Craig A. Smith serves as conservator. Smith challenges a $4,319.25 fee award to Baldonado. We affirm.

RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Smith is a cousin of Mouton, who retired in 1979 and has no children. In March 2009, the Public Guardian of the County of Los Angeles filed a petition to initiate a conservatorship regarding Mouton. To represent Mouton, the probate court appointed attorney James A. Morris, a member of the Probate Volunteer Panel (PVP).1 Since June 2009, Smith has served as Mouton’s conservator. Inventories and appraisals of Mouton’s belongings and property disclosed assets exceeding $1.5 million. At some point, Mouton moved from his home to a retirement center in San Dimas, where he entered into a putative marriage with Roiece Sunny Cooper, who also resided in the retirement center. In November 2010, Smith filed a petition for exclusive authority to give medical consent for Mouton. Smith sought, inter alia, the authority to have Mouton placed in a secured perimeter area of the residential center, and a determination that Mouton lacked the capacity to enter into a marriage or registered domestic partnership. In support of the petition, Smith submitted a declaration from Dr. Samir Anabi, who opined that Mouton suffered

1 The PVP provides a pool of private attorneys from which the probate court may select counsel to represent a conservatee. (See Conservatorship of Gregory D. (2013) 214 Cal.App.4th 62, 65, fn. 1; Prob. Code, § 1470, subd. (a); Los Angeles County Superior Court Rules, rule 4.123.)

2 from dementia, and lacked the ability to understand the duties and obligations of marriage. On February 23, 2011, at a hearing on the petition, the probate court granted the petition to the extent that Smith sought authority over Mouton’s medical care, but deferred its ruling regarding Mouton’s capacity to marry. The court, on its own motion, appointed PVP attorney Baldonado under Evidence Code section 730 as an expert to evaluate Mouton’s best interests and report them to the court. On March 28, 2011, Baldonado submitted her first report to the probate court, stating that she had visited Mouton, who was then living in a secured perimeter area of the San Dimas retirement center. Also present during the visit was Cooper. Baldonado stated that she was unable to discover any reason for Mouton’s placement in the secured perimeter area, and recommended that he be moved to the regular living facility so that he and Cooper could see each other “under more pleasant circumstances.” In a second report dated June 7, 2011, Baldonado stated that Mouton had been relocated to a regular but “dreary” room in the San Dimas residential center. According to Baldonado, Mouton was unhappy in the San Dimas residential center, and wanted to return to his home to live there with Cooper. Baldonado further stated that Mouton “would be better served by a conservator . . . who cares about taking care of him and [does] not make financial decisions that only benefit the conservator . . . .” Regarding the putative marriage, she recommended that a postnuptial agreement and estate plan “could be negotiated . . . so that everyone is protected,” and that Mouton and Cooper “should be left to enjoy each other with what time is left of their lives.” She also recommended that the probate court explore the possibility of returning Mouton to his home.

3 A hearing was set for November 21, 2011, to address Mouton’s place of residence and other matters. On that date, Baldonado filed her third report and a declaration supporting her request for a fee award.2 Her report recommended that Mouton and Cooper be permitted to reside together in residential unit in Claremont. Her declaration requested a fee award of $4,750, stating that she had provided 19 hours of services, at an hourly rate of $250. Attached to the declaration was an itemized statement of her services and the hours allocated to them. Included in the request was 1.5 hours that she anticipated for her appearance at the November 21, 2011 hearing. The November 21, 2011 hearing involved morning and afternoon sessions. During the hearing, the court ordered that Mouton and Cooper be relocated to the residential unit in Claremont. The court again deferred its ruling regarding Mouton’s capacity to marry, and set a hearing regarding that matter for March 7, 2012. In addition, the court addressed Baldonado’s fee request. In view of the length of the hearing, the court approved fees of $5,500 for Baldonado reflecting 22 hours of services, including 3 additional hours for her appearance at the hearing, beyond the 1.5 hours that she had anticipated. The fees were to be paid by the conservatorship estate. In a report dated March 6, 2012, Baldonado stated that Mouton’s putative marriage had been annulled in another action. She recommended that the probate court discharge her “as [her] 730 function ha[d] been completed,” noting that Mouton had been moved to a more appropriate placement, where he and Cooper

2 At our request, appellant has provided a copy of Baldonado’s declaration in support of her fee request. We hereby augment the record to include the declaration. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.155(a)(1)(A).)

4 were living together. She requested $4,319.25 in additional fees and costs, but provided no itemization or other documents to support the request. At the March 7, 2012 hearing, the probate court relieved Baldonado and took the issue of Mouton’s capacity to marry under submission. Regarding Baldonado’s fee request, Smith’s counsel, Keith S. Walker, asked the court to direct Baldonado to submit a declaration and documentation “detailing her time,” including the services she had provided in connection with the prior $5,500 fee award, and to allow him to respond to it.3 Baldonado agreed to provide the specified documentation. The court further stated that Walker would be permitted to submit a responsive declaration, after which the matter would be taken under submission. On March 16, 2012, Baldonado filed a declaration and supporting documentation limited to her services on and after November 21, 2011. The declaration stated that “[f]rom the date of November 21, 2012 [sic],” she had provided approximately 17 hours of services at an hourly rate of $250, resulting in outstanding fees totaling $4,319.25. Accompanying the declaration was an itemization reflecting hours of service on and after November 21, 2011, including four hours related to the November 21, 2011 hearing (1.5 hours for a meeting with Mouton and 2.5 hours for the afternoon session). Walker filed responsive declaration on March 23, 2012, asserting that Baldonado failed to provide a full itemization supporting her fee requests.

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