Klinkerfuss v. Cronin

289 S.W.3d 607, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 436, 2009 WL 910699
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 2009
DocketED 91063
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 289 S.W.3d 607 (Klinkerfuss v. Cronin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klinkerfuss v. Cronin, 289 S.W.3d 607, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 436, 2009 WL 910699 (Mo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

LAWRENCE E. MOONEY, Judge.

In Bleak House, Charlee Dickens mocked the farcical case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, a dispute over an inheritance that persisted so long that the costs of contention consumed the entire estate. Today, we confront the no less ludicrous litigation of Klinkerfuss v. Cronin, which has twice before darkened our dockets. The plaintiff beneficiary, Elaine Klinker-fuss, appeals a judgment, entered pursuant to our prior remand, for attorneys' fees against her share of a trust due to her vexatious litigation against the defendant trustee, William Cronin. Because we find no error, we affirm the trial court's award of attorneys' fees and expenses in the amount of $161,728.95, which entirely exhausts the beneficiary's share of the trust. Because we conclude that this appeal rep *611 resents a continuation of the beneficiary's groundless litigation against the trustee, we award the trust its attorneys' fees and expenses on appeal in the amount of $57,762.11. We remand the cause with directions that the trial court enter judgment in favor of the trust and against the plaintiff beneficiary for $57,762.11. We do so in order to place the trust's innocent beneficiary more nearly in the position that she would have enjoyed but for this vexatious appeal.

Factual and Procedural Background

We have previously decided Klinkerfuss v. Cronin, 120 S.W.3d 758 (Mo.App. E.D.2003)(per curiam) ((Klinkerfuss I") and Klinkerfuss v. Cronin, 199 S.W.3d 831 (Mo.App. E.D.2006) ("Klinkerfuss II"). We liberally borrow the factual and procedural background from Klinkerfuss II without further citation.

In 1995, Erna Strawn executed a revocable living trust naming her adult daughters, Delores Cronin ("the innocent beneficiary") and Elaine Klinkerfuss, as the primary beneficiaries. Ms. Strawn named herself and her grandson, the defendant William Cronin, as co-trustees. The trust provided that Mr. Cronin would continue as the sole trustee upon Ms. Strawn's death, disability, or incapacity. The trust also provided that, assuming the primary beneficiaries were living, the trust assets would be divided into two equal shares. Each beneficiary would then receive three distributions, the first upon Ms. Strawn's death, the second on the fifth anniversary of her death, and the third distribution on the tenth anniversary of her death.

After Ms. Strawn's death in July 1999, the beneficiary informed the trustee that she questioned whether the trust should continue to exist and that she intended to "break" the trust, have the trustee removed, and take her share of the trust property outright. The trustee retained the law firm of Greensfelder, Hemker & Gale, P.C. ("Greensfelder") to administer the trust and to defend against the benefi-clary's attacks. The beneficiary filed suit in 2000 for removal of the trustee, an accounting, and actual and punitive damages. The beneficiary made numerous allegations, including that the trustee had breached his fiduciary duty and committed waste. The trustee feared that a conflict of interest existed between the trust's administration and the beneficiary's personal attacks on him, so he retained attorney Jan Adams, who was not associated with Greensfelder.

The beneficiary's suit to remove the trustee went to trial in 2002, and Adams represented the trustee. Upon granting judgment at the close of the beneficiary's case, the trial court concluded, inter alia, that from the date of her mother's death, the beneficiary had attempted to have her interest in the trust settled upon her immediately, despite the trust's explicit provisions to the contrary; that the beneficiary's actions had caused the trustee to engage legal counsel; that the beneficiary had shown animosity toward the trustee in her efforts to have the trust terminated; that the trustee had performed his duties, had prudently maintained the trust corpus, and had not committed waste; that the attorneys' fees in the case were reasonable and necessary; that the bulk of the attorneys' fees involved were occasioned by the beneficiary's actions in filing suit; and that the beneficiary had sued for selfish reasons and not to protect the trust. We affirmed the trial court's judgment in Klinkerfuss I, 120 SW.3d 758.

The trustee then filed a motion for trustee's fees and a motion for attorneys' fees, requesting that the attorneys' fees be allocated exclusively against the beneficiary's *612 share of the trust. After a hearing, the trial court granted the request for trustee's fees in full. The trial court also allocated half of the requested Greensfelder fees against the beneficiary's share of the trust, but none of the Adams fees. Both parties appealed. Attorneys Michael Gross and Joseph Yeckel (collectively "the Gross law office") represented the trustee on appeal.

In Klinkerfuss II, we noted that the trial court found none of the beneficiary's claims against the trustee had any merit and that the beneficiary filed suit for selfish reasons rather than to protect the trust. Therefore, we found that the see-ond appeal represented a continuation of the beneficiary's groundless and unsue-cessful litigation against the trustee with the sole purpose of benefiting the benefi-ciliary. We reversed in part and remanded the case so that the trial court could determine the reasonable amount of all attorneys' fees caused by the beneficiary's vexatious litigation, including the second appeal, and allocate those amounts against the beneficiary's share of the trust. Our mandate directed the trial court to:

[Dletermine the reasonable amount of Greensfelder's and Ms. Adam{s]'s total attorney's fees caused by beneficiary's vexatious litigation and to allocate those amounts against beneficiary's share of the trust estate and to conduct a hearing to determine the reasonable amount of attorney's fees on appeal and allocate that amount against beneficiary's share of the trust estate[.]

The trial court conducted a hearing in July 2007. The judge who presided at trial had been appointed to this Court, so a different judge conducted the hearing on remand. The judge took judicial notice of the "entire record of this case, including the prior findings of the trial court and the Court of Appeals' decisions," including the record of the first hearing on attorneys' fees, which included testimony on the Greensfelder and Adams fees. The judge also heard additional testimony from Adams, Gross, and Yeckel. Further, he received nineteen exhibits including evidence of attorney billing rates in the St. Louis area. Finally, he received affidavits from the billing attorneys along with detailed records of the work performed, hours billed, billing rates, amounts billed, and expenses.

The trial court issued its judgment allocating a total of $161,728.95 in attorneys' fees and expenses against the beneficiary's share of the trust as follows: $42,104.31 for Greensfelder's services from 1999 to 2004; $27,088 for Greensfelder's work following the remand in Klinkerfuss II and up to, but not including, the hearing on remand (Le., from October 25, 2006 to July 20, 2007); $48,902.50 for Adams's services; and $48,634.14 for the Gross law office's appellate work on Klinkerfuss II This award exceeds the beneficiary's share of the trust and thus exhausts it. The beneficiary appeals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 S.W.3d 607, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 436, 2009 WL 910699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klinkerfuss-v-cronin-moctapp-2009.