Miller v. Campbell, Warburton, Fitzsimmons, Smith, Mendel & Pastore

76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 649, 162 Cal. App. 4th 1331, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 735
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 2008
DocketH030965
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 649 (Miller v. Campbell, Warburton, Fitzsimmons, Smith, Mendel & Pastore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Campbell, Warburton, Fitzsimmons, Smith, Mendel & Pastore, 76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 649, 162 Cal. App. 4th 1331, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 735 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*1334 Opinion

PREMO, J.

Defendant Campbell, Warburton, Fitzsimmons, Smith, Mendel & Pastore (Campbell Warburton) is a law firm that had represented plaintiff Reiko Miller in connection with her duties as the executor of her mother’s estate. At the conclusion of that matter, Campbell Warburton requested its attorneys’ fees from the probate court and was awarded all but one category of the fees it sought. The probate court’s major reason for denying that one category of fees was its finding that the fees had been generated by services rendered to Miller personally, not as the executor of the estate. Campbell Warburton did not appeal the probate court’s decision but initiated this action for quantum meruit to recover the fees directly from Miller. 1

The trial court granted Miller’s motions in limine to exclude all evidence, which resulted in dismissal of the case. There were two grounds for the trial court’s ruling. First, the trial court held that the claim was barred by the final judgment in the probate case. Second, the trial court concluded, based upon the evidence submitted in connection with the in limine motions, that Campbell Warburton could not prove its quantum meruit claim. Campbell Warburton appeals from the resulting judgment. For reasons we shall explain, we reverse.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

A. The Probate Proceedings

Miller’s mother, Ruby Taniguchi, died on August 28, 1988. Her will named Miller and Miller’s brothers, Rick and Ron Taniguchi, as beneficiaries. The will was admitted to probate on December 12, 1990; the decree of final distribution was filed 14 years later on January 18, 2005.

Miller was initially the sole executor of the will and Campbell Warburton represented her. On January 15, 1993, the probate court entered an order of preliminary distribution, which, among other things, allowed Campbell Warburton a partial statutory fee of $10,000 from estate funds. In 1999, the probate court added Ron and Rick Taniguchi as co-executors.

*1335 One issue that arose during administration concerned a parcel of real property known to the parties as the El Dori property. Miller had held title to the El Dori property along with her mother and her father. Many years earlier Miller had pledged her share of the El Dori property as collateral for a loan from her father. Miller eventually repaid the loan. Her father died sometime thereafter. Miller’s name was never removed from the title; title to the property remained in Miller and her parents. When the El Dori property was sold through probate of her mother’s will in 1991, Miller personally collected her one-third interest, approximately $81,000, from the proceeds of its sale.

In 2001, Miller filed a second account and report to which her brothers objected. The brothers challenged, among other things, the $81,000 Miller had received from the sale of the El Dori property. They claimed that Miller had released her interest in El Dori when she pledged it as collateral for the loan. Trial on these objections was set for July 2002. Very shortly before trial was set to begin, Miller fired Campbell Warburton and retained the firm of Atwood, Haiman & Westerberg. After several continuances, trial was held on January 27, 2003. The probate court resolved the El Dori issue in favor of Miller.

On May 7, 2004, the three co-executors filed a petition for final distribution. Anticipating that Campbell Warburton would submit a claim for attorneys’ fees beyond the $10,000 it had been awarded in 1993, the petition asked the probate court to deny the claim. The reason for the request was that Campbell Warburton had allegedly been negligent in advising Miller and in allowing the estate to remain open for over a decade, that the firm had no fee agreement with any of the co-executors, and that it had an undisclosed conflict of interest that barred any claim for fees. The co-executors also stressed that, as of 1999, they had agreed that Campbell Warburton would no longer represent the executors or the estate, that each co-executor now had separate counsel, and that all attorneys’ fees owed by each co-executor would be paid by the respective co-executor and not out of estate assets.

Campbell Warburton filed an objection to the petition and requested its statutory fees ($27,842.27), costs ($1,018.75), and extraordinary fees ($59,492.50). Campbell Warburton separated the extraordinary fees into two categories: fees for the management and sale of real property ($19,307.25) and fees for the “defense of executor” ($40,185.25). The latter category represented the fees generated in defending Miller against her brothers’ objections to the second account, which had largely involved defending Miller’s interest in the El Dori property.

*1336 The probate court awarded Campbell Warburton a total of $38,168.27. Although the written order does not break down the award, the amount awarded is the sum of all the fees Campbell Warburton requested as statutory fees, costs, and extraordinary fees for the management and sale of real property, less $10,000, which was the amount of the partial payment awarded to Campbell Warburton in 1993. Impliedly, therefore, the probate court did not award Campbell Warburton the $40,185.25 it had requested as fees for “defense of executor.” The probate court’s oral ruling clarified the basis for the award: “I believe that the fees requested regarding management and sale of real property are reasonable and the services were to the direct benefit of the estate. I believe that they [Campbell Warburton] should receive a total compensation for extraordinary fees for the management and sale of real property of $19,307.25. [][] As to the remaining request for extraordinary fees, they are denied for any number of reasons, but the major reason in my mind is these fees are—these services were expended for the benefit of Ms. Miller in her private capacity largely to defend the claim regarding the disputed one/third interest in the El Dori property. It’s very hard for me to separate the request for the other fees from this driving dynamic of what do we do with the one/third interest in the El Dori property. And I notice in the declarations I received that the lion’s share of that request for extraordinary fees is really for the El Dori property. As I said, I believe those services were rendered and the fees incurred by Ms. Miller in her private capacity, not as a representative of the estate.”

B. Proceedings in the Instant Matter

Campbell Warburton did not appeal the probate court order but turned directly to Miller, claiming a quantum meruit right to the fees the probate court denied. Miller opted for nonbinding arbitration (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6201) and the arbitrator held in favor of the attorneys. Miller rejected the award and commenced this action in the superior court. (Id., § 6204, subd. (c).)

Immediately prior to trial, Miller filed a group of motions in limine. Two are pertinent here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 649, 162 Cal. App. 4th 1331, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-campbell-warburton-fitzsimmons-smith-mendel-pastore-calctapp-2008.