in Re Guardianship of Keith A. Hanker, an Incapacitated Person

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2013
Docket01-12-00507-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Guardianship of Keith A. Hanker, an Incapacitated Person (in Re Guardianship of Keith A. Hanker, an Incapacitated Person) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re Guardianship of Keith A. Hanker, an Incapacitated Person, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 25, 2013

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-12-00507-CV ——————————— IN RE GUARDIANSHIP OF KEITH A. HANKER, AN INCAPACITATED PERSON

On Appeal from the Probate Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. PR0067842

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Tracey Hanker, guardian of the person of Keith A. Hanker, appeals from a

probate court order for payment of attorney’s fees and expenses from Keith’s

estate. In two issues, she contends that the probate court abused its discretion in

awarding an hourly rate of (1) $300 for the attorney and (2) $85 for the paralegal when the only evidence of appropriate hourly rates was her attorney’s

“unchallenged testimony” of higher rates. We affirm.

Background

In June 2005, the probate court appointed Tracey as guardian of the person

of her brother Keith and Moody National Bank as guardian of Keith’s estate. In

April 2010, the court authorized Tracey to employ the Law Offices of Kenneth C.

Kaye to represent her in carrying out her duties as Keith’s guardian, and ordered

that the fees and expenses be paid from Keith’s estate “once approved by the

Court.” At that time, the court had a published and signed fee schedule entitled

“Standards for Court Approval of Attorney Fee Petitions.” 1

In December 2011, Tracey filed her Application for Payment of Attorney’s

Fees, supported by the affidavit of her attorney, Kenneth C. Kaye. Kaye’s affidavit

stated that the amount of reasonable and necessary fees and expenses for almost

eleven months 2 was $52,576.22 based on “reasonable” hourly rates of $350 to

$400 for him and $125 to $150 for his paralegal. The application stated that 1 The fee schedule, effective September 1, 2007, is not in the appellate record but was discussed at the hearing on attorney’s fees and is available at http://www.co.galveston.tx.us/probate_court/documents/Stand-Court-Approv-Att- fees.pdf. We take judicial notice of the schedule. See TEX. R. EVID. 201 (providing for judicial notice of “adjudicative facts”); Office of Pub. Util. Counsel v. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 878 S.W.2d 598, 600 (Tex. 1994) (recognizing that court of appeals may take judicial notice for first time on appeal). 2 The requested fees and expenses covered the time period from December 21, 2009, through November 6, 2011, and therefore included work performed by Kaye before and after the April 2010 court order authorizing his retention. 2 Keith’s estate had become indebted to Kaye for this amount and that the court had

“impliedly authorized” this payment in its April 2010 order. Attached to Kaye’s

affidavit was a statement itemizing the date and a general description of the

services provided and expenses.

The bank objected to Tracey’s application, specifically objecting that the

requested hourly rate exceeded the standard rate set by the Galveston County

probate court. Margaret T. Hindman, Keith’s guardian ad litem, also objected to

Tracey’s application, objecting to approximately ninety hours of work performed

by Kaye and his paralegal and approximately $8000 in expenses as unreasonable

and unnecessary.

The probate court held a hearing on Tracey’s application at which Kaye

testified. He testified that his usual fee was between $350 and $400 an hour and

that a reasonable fee for a paralegal with his paralegal’s skills and qualifications

was $125 an hour. Kaye testified about some of his firm’s specific work and

expenses. Neither the bank nor the guardian ad litem cross-examined Kaye or

offered evidence. The guardian ad litem argued that a fee of $125 per hour for a

paralegal was unreasonable and that certain fees and expenses were unreasonable

and unnecessary. The bank “echo[ed] the guardian ad litem’s concerns” about

some of Kaye’s work. The probate court took judicial notice of Tracey’s

application.

3 At the conclusion of the hearing, the probate court stated that “the auditor

has gone through this accounting and I’m going to get with her for the final dollar

amount.” As to the attorney’s fees, the court stated that “the maximum amount an

attorney’s going to be allowed is 300 an hour” and “the maximum amount for a

legal assistant is 85 an hour” based on the court’s published fee schedule

applicable to the fees at issue. The court’s fee schedule advised lawyers that the

court owed a duty to the estates of wards to ensure that lawyers were paid only

“reasonable and necessary” attorney’s fees and expenses, and that those would be

determined based on the factors set forth in rule 1.04 of the Rules of Professional

Conduct. The fee schedule included a table “setting forth what the court believes is

appropriate rates for court-appointed fiduciaries’ attorney’s fees” based on an

attorney’s years of experience. The schedule provided that while there were

circumstances in which the trial court could deviate from these ranges, in the

typical case an attorney with eleven or more years of experience—like Kaye—had

a “court-approved rate” of “$200-300/ hour” and a paralegal’s rate was $45 to $85

per hour unless the paralegal had certification in estate planning and probate law.

The probate court also concluded that some of the work for which Tracey

sought reimbursement was “guardianship work” rather than “attorney’s work” and

required prior court approval. The court signed an order for payment of fees and

expenses in the amount of $24,449.96, finding that attorney’s fees and expenses in

4 that amount were “reasonable, necessary, and required for the protection and

welfare of Keith A. Hanker and should be paid . . . .” 3 This appeal followed.

Payment of Attorney’s and Paralegal’s Fees

In her first issue, Tracey contends that the probate court abused its discretion

as a matter of law in awarding attorney’s fees at $300 per hour because the only

evidence of an appropriate rate was Kaye’s unchallenged testimony that $350 to

$400 per hour was reasonable and necessary. In her second issue, Tracey similarly

contends that the probate court abused its discretion as a matter of law in awarding

paralegal fees at $85 per hour because the only evidence of an appropriate rate was

Kaye’s unchallenged testimony that $125 per hour was reasonable and necessary.

Tracey does not challenge any reduction by the probate court in the number of

Kaye’s and his paralegal’s hours for which she sought payment. 4

3 The clerk’s record includes Kaye’s statement with handwritten calculations made by the probate court judge or auditor. These notes indicate that the court reduced both the fees and expenses. The $24,449.96 for fees was calculated based on (1) sixty-eight and one-half hours of Kaye’s time at $300 per hour, (2) thirty-five hours of paralegal time at $85 per hour, and (3) expenses of $924.96. The probate court order, however, does not state a specific hourly rate for attorney’s fees or paralegal fees. 4 Tracey requests that we reverse the probate court order and remand the case to the probate court to determine an hourly rate within the range to which Kaye testified and multiply that rate by the number of hours that the court found appropriate. She also requests that we render judgment as a matter of law for paralegal fees based on a rate of $125 per hour multiplied by the number of hours the court found appropriate. 5 A. Standard of review

We review the trial court’s approval of attorney’s fees incurred by a

guardian for an abuse of discretion. Epstein v.

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