In re Estate of Johnston

733 S.E.2d 856, 318 Ga. App. 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 2, 2012
DocketA12A0995
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 733 S.E.2d 856 (In re Estate of Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Johnston, 733 S.E.2d 856, 318 Ga. App. 324 (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

Markel Hutchins, a purported creditor of the Estate of Kathryn Sanford Johnston (“the Estate”), appeals the probate court’s denial of his motion to set aside the discharge of the Estate administrator and motion for an accounting and return of Estate funds. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the probate court’s order discharging the administrator and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

The record shows that on November 21,2006, Kathryn Johnston was shot and killed in her home by undercover Atlanta Police Department (“APD”) officers serving a no-knock warrant. Johnston’s niece, Sarah Charles Dozier, was appointed as the administrator of Johnston’s estate in October 2007. In such capacity, Dozier filed suit in Fulton County State Court in November 2007 against the City of Atlanta (“the City”), the police chief, and several officers seeking damages for, inter alia, Johnston’s wrongful death and pain and [325]*325suffering.1 In August 2010, following mediation, Dozier and the City ultimately settled the case for $4.9 million. The City resolution authorizing the settlement stated that the settlement checks, made in two installments,2 were to be “made payable to Sarah C. Dozier and the firm of Cochran[,] Cherry[,] Givens[,] Smith[,] Sistrunk[,] and Sams. Such payment shall be in full consideration of the dismissal of all claims against the City of Atlanta. . . .”

On September 29, 2010, Dozier filed a petition to determine heirs, seeking a final order establishing Johnston’s “next of kin” under OCGA § 51-4-5 to receive the wrongful death proceeds from the settlement. At the subsequent hearing, Dozier’s counsel advised the probate court that the settlement proceeds from the City were allocated and distributed pursuant to the wrongful death claim to the heirs-to-be, as determined by the court, and that no funds therefrom were passing through the Estate. On December 21,2010, the probate court entered an order on the petition, naming Dozier and three other individuals — two of Johnston’s grand nieces and a grand nephew —■ as heirs of the Estate.

On April 20,2011, Reverend Markel Hutchins, a nonlawyer, sent a letter to Dozier and her attorney, detailing “consulting and other professional services,” which he alleged he provided to the Estate, “that made the significant settlement in [the case against the City] possible”; Hutchins included an invoice addressed to the Estate, seeking either $490,000 (ten percent of the settlement amount) or amounts ranging from $333,000 to $382,500 for the value of his services, plus $75,000 in out-of-pocket expenses.

On May 20, 2011, Dozier filed in the probate court an inventory, a final return, and a petition for discharge as personal representative, stating in the petition: [326]*326Dozier listed no unpaid claims of the estate in the petition. She published notice of the petition for discharge in The Fulton County Daily Report, and individual purported heirs acknowledged services of the petition; Dozier did not serve Hutchins with notice of the petition.3

[325]*325The estate of the decedent was established for the purpose of having an Administrator to pursue both wrongful death claims under [OCGA § 51-4-5] and any claims which may have belonged to the estate. The proceeds of the settlement of all claims allocated $0 to the estate [ ] and all proceeds to the wrongful death claim. The Administrator reports that there are no probate assets.

[326]*326On August 11, 2011, Hutchins filed a claim against the Estate, claiming that he provided “consulting and other expert services... to, for[,] and on behalf of the family and the [e]state of Kathryn Johnston.” On August 18, 2011, the probate court issued a final order discharging Dozier as administrator of the Estate “from office and all liability.”

On August 23,2011, Hutchins filed a petition for injunctive relief and damages in Fulton County Superior Court against the Estate, Dozier, individually and as administrator, and Cochran, Cherry, Givens, Smith & Sistrunk, RC. (collectively, “the defendants”), the firm that represented Dozier in the suit against the City, alleging that he represented the defendants in his professional capacity in pursuit of the litigation against the City and was entitled to payment for his services pursuant to an express oral agreement that he receive ten percent of any recovery of damages obtained for Johnston’s death or, in the alternative, the reasonable value of his services.4 On August 26,2011, Hutchins filed in probate court a motion to set aside Dozier’s discharge “based on fraud” pursuant to OCGA § 53-7-53,5 andhe filed a petition for accounting and return of estate funds on September 22, 2011, as well as a motion for an emergency hearing on the motions.6

On October 24, 2011, the probate court entered separate orders denying all three motions, including Hutchins’s request for a hearing. In the order denying the motion to set aside the discharge order, the probate court rejected Hutchins’s argument that Dozier’s petition for discharge contained false statements by failing to list Hutchins as an unpaid creditor because Dozier, as personal representative of the Estate, “had the authority to evaluate the validity of claims made against the estate,” and although Hutchins had provided copies of examples of his fees, he “fail[ed] to provide any evidence of an [327]*327agreement between himself and [Dozier] as personal representative of the [E] state.” The court also found meritless Hutchins’s claim that settlement proceeds for Johnston’s wrongful death belonged to the Estate; the court specifically noted that the recovery “was for the benefit of [Johnston’s] next-of-kin[,] and such recovery did not become an asset of the [E]state and is not subject to the statutes governing estate administration,” and that based on Dozier’s assertion that Johnston died instantly, there was no valid claim for actual pain and suffering nor any recovery for such by the Estate. In the order denying Hutchins’s motion for an accounting and to return funds, the probate court concluded that Hutchins had failed to establish that he was a legitimate creditor of the Estate, and he lacked standing to seek an accounting.

Hutchins appeals, arguing that the probate court erred by finding that Dozier’s petition for discharge did not contain any false statements and that he was not a legitimate creditor.

With regard to an administrator’s obligation to provide notice to creditors, Georgia law provides in relevant part:

... Every personal representative shall, within 60 days from the date of qualification, publish a notice directed generally to all of the creditors of the estate to render an account of their demands. The notice shall be published once a week for four weeks in the official newspaper of the county in which the personal representative qualified.

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Related

Hutchins v. Cochran, Cherry, Givens, Smith & Sistrunk, P.C.
770 S.E.2d 668 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
733 S.E.2d 856, 318 Ga. App. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-johnston-gactapp-2012.