Ethel Carmical v. Mary Jane Kilpatrick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 18, 2003
DocketM2002-00613-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ethel Carmical v. Mary Jane Kilpatrick (Ethel Carmical v. Mary Jane Kilpatrick) 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
Ethel Carmical v. Mary Jane Kilpatrick, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE March 18, 2003 Session

ETHEL CARMICAL, ET AL. v. MARY JANE KILPATRICK, ET AL.

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Perry County No. 3926 Timothy L. Easter, Judge

No. M2002-00613-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 11, 2003

This is a challenge to an award of attorney’s fees in a partition action. The testatrix left 500 acres of land in Perry County to her then-living heirs. Some of the heirs filed this action to partition and sell the land. After several years, the land finally sold. The trial court awarded 10% of the sale proceeds, approximately $100,000, as attorney’s fees for the three attorneys who provided legal services in the partition action. One of the heirs now appeals that award, claiming that it was excessive. The appellant filed neither a transcript of the proceedings nor a statement of the evidence pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 24(c). We must affirm the trial court’s award, because the issues raised by the appellant would require a review of the proceedings below, and without a transcript of the trial proceedings or a statement of the evidence, we must assume that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in light of the evidence.

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

HOLLY M. KIRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

John P. Cauley, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Mary Jane Kilpatrick.

Tommy E. Doyle, Linden, Tennessee, for the appellee, Ruth McCoy Heath.

Dan R. Bradley, Waverly, Tennessee, for the appellees, Ethel Carmical, Jesse L. McCoy, Howard McCoy, and John J. McCoy. OPINION

Lula McCoy died testate, leaving four tracts of land totaling 500 acres in Perry County. She devised the land 25% each to her then-living children, John McCoy, Mary Jane Kilpatrick, and Ruth McCoy Heath, and the other 25% to be divided equally among her deceased son’s three children, Ethel Carmical, Howard McCoy, and Jesse McCoy.

On December 14, 1998, four of the heirs -- Ethel Carmical, Jesse L. McCoy, Howard McCoy, and John J. McCoy (collectively “Petitioners”) -- filed the lawsuit below seeking partition and sale of the land. On November 3, 1999, Judge Jeffrey Bivens ordered that the property in question be sold. In that order, Judge Bivens provided that the surveyor, auctioneer, and advertising expenses would be paid from the sales proceeds. The order included no provision for the payment of attorney’s fees.

On March 1, 2001, Judge Russell Heldman entered an order stating that the parties had agreed upon a sale date on May 12, 2001. As provided in the order, the property sold on May 12, 2001. On May 14, 2001, attorney Tommy E. Doyle (“Doyle”), on behalf of his client Defendant/Appellee Ruth McCoy Heath (“Heath”), filed a motion to confirm the sale and to approve attorney’s fees. On May 30, 2001, Doyle filed a statement in support of his fee request, reflecting that he had spent 91.40 hours on the partition suit. On June 28, 2001, Doyle submitted an affidavit supporting his fee request.

On July 12, 2001, Judge Heldman set the case for hearing on July 19, 2001, in order to “determine all remaining disputed issues, including issues pertaining to fees and to what remaining orders are appropriate for entry.” On July 23, 2001, the hearing was reset for August 20, 2001. Also on that date, however, the trial court entered its order confirming the sale and approving attorney’s fees and expenses. The order recited that the trial court had conducted a hearing on May 30, 2001, and that its decision was based “on the pleadings and the proof and the statements made in this cause and from the record as a whole.” In that order, the attorney’s fees were set at 10% from the proceeds of the sale of the decedent’s property, or $104,124.

Within one week after the July 23, 2001 order was entered, Defendant/Appellant Mary Jane Kilpatrick (“Kilpatrick”) fired her attorney, Donald W. Schwendimann (“Schwendimann”). On July 30, 2001, Kilpatrick filed a pro se motion to continue the August 20, 2001 hearing for thirty (30) days so that she could retain another attorney.

On August 20, 2001, the trial court entered an order “nunc pro tunc” to be effective on May 30, 2001, which stated that the trial court approved the sale of the property and the 10% award of attorney’s fees. The order further provided that the attorney’s fee was “to be allocated among the three attorneys, Don Schwendimann, Dan Bradley, and Tommy E. Doyle, according to the time expended and the type of work, to be determined by the Court after consideration of sworn affidavits of time and expenses expended by the respective attorneys . . . .”

-2- On August 29, 2001, Kilpatrick’s new attorney filed his notice of appearance. On that same date, the newly retained counsel filed, on Kilpatrick’s behalf, a “Motion to be Heard on the Reasonableness of the Attorney’s Fee,” and a “Motion to Rehear” the decision regarding the setting of attorney’s fees.1

On September 17, 2001, the trial court entered an order on Kilpatrick’s motion to set aside attorney’s fees and for a continuance, stating that the attorney fee award previously approved by the court on July 23, 2001, should be divided equally between the three attorneys in the case, Doyle, Schwendimann, and Dan R. Bradley (“Bradley”). The trial court also permitted Schwendimann to withdraw, but noted his lien for the one-third share in the attorney’s fees. Finally, the trial court denied Kilpatrick’s request for a continuance. Another order was issued on September 17, 2001, stating that it would stay the other September 17, 2001 order, noted above, pending any motion to reconsider, alter, or amend pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 59, “if the same is timely filed.”

On October 16, 2001, Doyle filed a Rule 59 motion to alter or amend the September 17, 2001 order to the extent that it divided the attorney’s fees equally between counsel. He submitted his affidavit to the trial court noting that he had practiced law for approximately twenty-nine years and had handled numerous partition suits. He stated that “[i]t has been the practice of the Court to approve a ten (10) percent fee in a typical partition suit and more in complicated and time consuming partition suits.” Doyle asserted that he had done 70% of the legal work in the instant partition action and therefore deserved that same share of the fees awarded. In addition, Doyle submitted the affidavit of attorney Billy Townsend (“Townsend”), who stated that he had been practicing real estate law for thirty-four (34) years. He opined that “[t]he traditional attorney fee allowed in partition lawsuits in this circuit has been 10% of the sales price; although, in complex proceedings, the Courts have allowed greater amounts.” Townsend said that he had reviewed the file, and was of the opinion that Doyle had done 70% of the legal work on the partition action in this case, and should receive that proportion of the fees awarded. Doyle’s motion was set for hearing on November 26, 2001.

On November 26, 2001, Kilpatrick filed an untimely Rule 59 motion to alter or amend the judgment. She submitted her own affidavit in support of her motion.2 In her affidavit, Kilpatrick asserted that her oral fee arrangement with Schwendimann was based on an hourly rate of $100 per hour, and that Schwendimann never indicated to her that their arrangement would change when the decedent’s estate was closed. She claimed in her affidavit that the net result of the arrangement

1 After those motions were filed, the attorneys for the other parties both filed motions requesting that Kilpatrick be ordered to pay all future attorney’s fees and costs on behalf of all the p arties in the lawsuit.

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Ethel Carmical v. Mary Jane Kilpatrick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ethel-carmical-v-mary-jane-kilpatrick-tennctapp-2003.