In Re the Guardianship of McGregory

193 P.3d 295, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 131, 2008 WL 4276204
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 2008
DocketS-12597
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 P.3d 295 (In Re the Guardianship of McGregory) 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
In Re the Guardianship of McGregory, 193 P.3d 295, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 131, 2008 WL 4276204 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

The question presented in this appeal is whether attorney's fees and costs should be awarded as a matter of course to parties who successfully oppose the State's efforts to impose a guardianship on an allegedly incapacitated person. The pertinent facts, briefly stated, are as follows.

In 2006 eighty-eight-year-old Loraine McGregory was moved from the Pioneer Home in Anchorage by her daughter Karen Decker-Brown. When Decker-Brown refused to tell the State where McGregory was *297 residing, the State filed a petition for guardianship under AS 13.26.090. The petition claimed that McGregory was incapacitated and that it was not known where she was or who was caring for her. It also alleged that Decker-Brown, who held McGregory's power of attorney, was not paying McGregory's bills, including a $27,000 debt to the Pioneer Home, and that she was making decisions that might not be in McGregory's best interests.

McGregory and Decker-Brown appeared in the guardianship proceedings through separate privately retained counsel. Decker-Brown moved to dismiss the petition and McGregory joined in the motion. Decker-Brown claimed in support of her motion that the Pioneer Home had inappropriately moved McGregory to a ward for severely disabled patients and when the home refused to reverse the transfer she moved McGrego-ry, with McGregory's consent, to a private assisted living facility where McGregory was doing well. She described the outstanding bill to the Pioneer Home as merely a matter of McGregory's insurer not making payments on time. 1

The State filed a "non-opposition" to the motion to dismiss, stating that a social worker had visited McGregory and interviewed her physician and the State had no further concerns regarding McGregory. The superi- or court dismissed the guardianship petition.

(a) Subject to (d) of this section, the state shall bear the costs of the visitor and expert appointed under AS 13.26.106(c).
(b) Subject to (c) and (d) of this section, the respondent shall bear the costs of the attorney appointed under AS 13.26.106(b), of the expert appointed under AS 13.26.109(d), of the guardian ad litem appointed under AS 13.26.025, and of other court and guardianship costs incurred under this chapter.

Both MceGregory and Decker-Brown moved for actual attorney's fees and costs. McGregory based her motion on Civil Rule 82, claiming that the State's petition was in bad faith. 2 She sought fees of $2,500. Decker-Brown based her motion on AS 13.26.131(d), claiming that the petition was "malicious, frivolous, or without just cause. 3 She sought fees of $6,500 and costs of $1,212.50. 4

The State opposed both motions. As to McGregory's motion, the State contended that Rule 82 should not apply to guardianship proceedings, and even if Rule 82 did apply, McGregory would not be entitled to full fees because the State did not act in bad faith, As to Decker-Brown's motion, the State argued that AS 18.26.181(d) did not apply. That statute addresses whether the State or the respondent should bear the costs and fees of attorneys and experts appointed by the court to represent a respondent under AS 18.26.106(b) and AS 18.26.109(d). Here, the State argued that Decker-Brown was not a "respondent" and the attorneys and experts were not court-appointed under those subsections. The State also argued that even if the statute did apply, its standard for allocating costs to the State-that the petition be malicious, frivolous, or without just cause-was not met.

After both movants replied, the court denied both motions finding that AS 18.26.1831 did not apply and the petition was not "mali *298 cious, frivolous, or without just cause." McGregory and Decker-Brown appeal these rulings. Pending appeal, McGregory died and Decker-Brown has been substituted as the personal representative of McGregory's estate.

*297 (c) The state shall pay all or part of the costs described in (b) of this section if the court finds that the payment is necessary to prevent the respondent from suffering financial hardship or from becoming dependent upon a government agency or a private person or agency.
(d) The court may require the petitioner to pay all or some of the costs described in (a) and (b) of this section if the court finds that the petitioner initiated a proceeding under this chapter that was malicious, frivolous, or without just cause.

*298 On appeal Decker-Brown contends that Civil Rule 82 should apply in guardianship proceedings. She acknowledges that guard-ianships are governed by the Probate Rules rather than the Civil Rules. She relies on Probate Rule 1(e) which provides that where no procedure is prescribed in the Probate Rules "the court may proceed in any lawful manner, including application of the Civil ... Rules," unless a chosen method of proceeding "interfere[s]) with the unique character and purpose of probate proceedings." 5 Decker-Brown notes that in Crittell v. Bingo, 6 a will contest case, this court held that Rule 82 applied where a statutory fee provision did not apply because of the fraud of the person claiming to be the personal representative. 7 Decker-Brown stresses in her reply brief that guardianship proceedings can be abused by government agencies and that awarding attorney's fees to respondents serves to protect them against such abuses.

The State argues that applying Rule 82 as a matter of course to guardianship proceedings would interfere with the unique character and purpose of guardianship proceedings by discouraging good faith actions taken to protect vulnerable adults. Further, the State argues by analogy to AS 18.26.181(d) that except where a petition is malicious, frivolous, or without just cause, the respondent should bear the costs of her counsel. 8 The State relies on two cases: Cooper v. State, which held that child-in-need-of-aid (CINA) proceedings are not subject to Rule 82 under a CINA rule similar to Probate Rule l(e); 9 and Wetherhorn v. Alaska Psychiatric Institute, which held that civil commitment proceedings are likewise not subject to Rule 82. 10

We believe that the State's position is largely correct. 11 A guardianship proceeding is protective in character, as are CINA proceedings and proceedings seeking the civil commitment of persons gravely disabled by mental illness.

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Related

In the Matter of the Protective Proceedings of Vernon H.
332 P.3d 565 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2014)
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3 A.3d 308 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 P.3d 295, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 131, 2008 WL 4276204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-mcgregory-alaska-2008.