Cottini v. Berggren

420 P.3d 1255
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 2018
Docket7250 S-16312
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 420 P.3d 1255 (Cottini v. Berggren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottini v. Berggren, 420 P.3d 1255 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

STOWERS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A former agent, appointed under a power of attorney, successfully defended an accounting of his actions, expenditures, and fees against objections and counterclaims by his former principal. In this appeal we are asked to resolve whether the former agent is entitled to reimbursement from his former principal for reasonable attorney's fees incurred in maintaining that defense. The superior court denied the agent's request for attorney's fees because the dispute occurred in the context of a guardianship proceeding and because the request did not meet the requirements of AS 13.26.291, which governs cost-shifting in guardianship proceedings. The agent appeals, arguing that AS 13.26.291 does not apply, that he is entitled to attorney's fees based on his authority as an agent to hire an attorney under AS 13.26.665(m), and that he is entitled to attorney's fees based on common law principles, equity, and considerations of public policy. We conclude that neither statute applies, but that the agent may be entitled to reimbursement of his attorney's fees under the common law of agency and as a matter of equity. We therefore reverse the superior court's order and remand for further proceedings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

John Berggren is an Anchorage resident with business and real estate interests worth over $12 million. He executed a general power of attorney in 2007 naming Marc Cottini as his attorney-in-fact-his legal agent 1 -in the event he became incapacitated. Berggren *1259 suffered a traumatic brain injury in July 2013, triggering the power of attorney. After the accident Berggren's attorney, David Shaftel, informed Cottini that he had been named Berggren's agent. Shortly after Cottini assumed his role as agent, Berggren's wife Olena filed a petition for guardianship. Acting as Berggren's agent, Cottini opposed the guardianship petition on Berggren's behalf. Over the next eight months, Cottini acted as Berggren's agent until, after court-ordered medical examinations concluded that Berggren had regained the capacity to manage his own affairs, the court terminated the agency. Olena withdrew her guardianship petition shortly afterwards. The court ordered Cottini to produce an accounting of his actions and expenditures during the time of his agency, which he did with the assistance of Shaftel's law firm. Shaftel represented Cottini in his capacity as Berggren's agent.

The accounting requested the court approve $71,683.57 as Cottini's fees and costs for acting as Berggren's agent. This included compensation for Cottini's time at a rate of $50 per hour. Cottini later declared that the accounting showed he processed transactions involving $1,064,947 including handling Berggren's personal and joint expenses and paying invoices amounting to $242,263. Berggren objected to Cottini's accounting, 2 arguing that Cottini's actions were not taken to advance Berggren's best interests, and that Cottini's fees were excessive.

Berggren also filed counterclaims alleging breach of Cottini's fiduciary duties and listing objections to specific requested fees and costs. Cottini hired a second attorney, Diane Vallentine, who appeared before the court "for the sole purpose of representing Mr. Cottini with regard to the Joint Objection to Accounting of Agent's Fees." Documents filed with the court consistently identified Shaftel as representing Cottini in his capacity as agent and Vallentine as representing Cottini individually; despite making this distinction, the two attorneys consistently cosigned filings and worked together.

Eventually, the parties settled. Berggren agreed to dismiss the counterclaims with prejudice, withdrew the objections, and agreed to pay most of what Cottini had initially requested; Cottini agreed to accept a slightly reduced total amount in fees and reimbursement in exchange for prompt payment. The parties reserved all issues regarding attorney's fees for decision by the court.

Shortly thereafter, Cottini filed a motion asking the court to award him $148,254 in attorney's fees incurred for Vallentine's work in assisting him in responding to Berggren's objections and in defending against Berggren's counterclaims. Cottini argued that as the appointed agent he was required to prepare an accounting of his actions, expenditures, and fees and that he was entitled to full payment of the attorney's fees he incurred in successfully defending the accounting under the power of attorney statute, specifically AS 13.26.665(m)(4), 3 which outlines a statutory agent's authority to hire and compensate attorneys. Cottini also contended that attorney's fees were warranted because Berggren had objected to the accounting in bad faith, and defending the accounting was necessary to make Cottini whole for his time and financial expenditures and to ensure third parties would not go unpaid. Berggren opposed the motion for attorney's fees, arguing that AS 13.26.665(m) did not apply because the legal services at issue benefited Cottini, not Berggren; that while the objections to Cottini's accounting were ultimately withdrawn, those objections were reasonable; and that the attorney's fees Cottini incurred were unreasonable. Berggren also argued that any request for legal fees should have been made under the fee-shifting provisions of Alaska Civil Rule 82.

The superior court denied Cottini's motion for attorney's fees. The court held that AS 13.26.665(m)(4) did not apply to the fee request because the statute allows reimbursement *1260 only for attorney's fees incurred for services to the principal that the agent reasonably believes are desirable for the proper execution of the agent's powers. The court, citing Vallentine's limited entry of appearance for the sole purpose of representing Cottini with regard to Berggren's objections, concluded that none of the attorney representation with respect to Berggren's objections fell within that statutory framework. The court also concluded that Alaska Civil Rule 82 has been displaced by AS 13.26.291(d) 4 as the governing rule for fee-shifting in any guardianship case, and that this statute required Berggren to pay for Cottini's attorney's fees only if adversary proceedings were initiated maliciously, frivolously, or without just cause. The court found that Berggren had not acted in such a manner when objecting to Cottini's accounting and that Cottini therefore was not entitled to attorney's fees. The court denied Cottini's motion and did not rule on any of Berggren's fact-based claims that some of the fees were excessive or unreasonable.

Cottini appeals the single question whether he is entitled to reimbursement for reasonable attorney's fees incurred in defending his actions and expenditures as Berggren's agent and in defending his requested fees.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

"[W]e independently review 'whether the trial court properly applied the law when awarding attorney's fees.' " 5

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Bluebook (online)
420 P.3d 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottini-v-berggren-alaska-2018.