Morrocco v. Toretto, No. 534769 (Jun. 24, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4789
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 24, 1996
DocketNo. 534769
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4789 (Morrocco v. Toretto, No. 534769 (Jun. 24, 1996)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrocco v. Toretto, No. 534769 (Jun. 24, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4789 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]Memorandum of Decision Stella Piotrowski died on October 22, 1991. She left behind a modest estate, a trio of warring children, and a pair of attorneys soon retained by different factions of those children. Within weeks, the attorneys for the heirs became co-administrators of the estate. The result has been a modern version ofBleak House. Almost five years after Ms. Piotrowski's death her estate has yet to close. The attorneys have demanded fees that are grossly excessive by any appropriate standard. Dissatisfied with the Probate Court's award of fees, the attorneys have now brought this appeal from probate, pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-186, asking this court to make an independent assessment of reasonable fees. I make such an assessment below.

The standard of review applicable to this appeal is established by Andrews v. Gorby, 237 Conn. 12 (1996). No record was made before the Probate Court. A trial de novo is accordingly required. Id. at 16. Such a trial has now been held. I must now reach "an independent determination, without regard to the result reached by the probate court." Id (Internal quotation marks and citation omitted.) In an effort to make "an independent assessment of the facts," id. at 17, I have neither seen nor considered the decision of the Probate Court appealed from. The following facts are found based on the evidence submitted by the parties and the Probate Court file (stripped of the decision CT Page 4790 appealed from) transmitted by the Probate Court.

Stella Piotrowski, as mentioned, died on October 22, 1991. She was a 97 year old widow and died intestate. She was survived by three grown children: John and Edward Piotrowski and Helen Toretto. (To avoid confusion, Ms. Piotrowski and her children will be referred to by their first names.) At the time of Stella's death, Helen was a widow in her early 70's. The ages of John and Edward are not in evidence. Edward died on January 17, 1996, prior to the trial, and his executrix has been substituted as a party in his place.

Stella left a modest estate. Her principal asset was a four unit apartment house in Bristol. One unit was occupied by Helen. Stella had herself lived in this house for many years prior to her death. The house was valued at $215,000 in the probate inventory, but the evidence makes it clear that this value is excessive. The house failed to sell on the open market, and it was ultimately sold in 1993 to John and Edward for $165,000. Under the circumstances, this latter price can fairly be considered the fair market value of the property. Stella also left cash and bank accounts totalling $68,760. Her inventory finally lists nine items of miscellaneous personal property valued at a total of $300. Suitably adjusted for the actual fair market value of the house, her estate thus had a gross value of approximately $234,000.

Stella's children were divided into two factions at the time of her death. John and Edward were on one side, and Helen was on the other. Each faction retained its own attorney at an early date. The attorneys so retained are the plaintiffs in the present appeal. Their initial roles in this drama must be separately described.

Attorney Daniel Tully ("Tully") was retained by John and Edward prior to Stella's death. He was initially retained to file an application in the Bristol Probate Court to have a temporary conservator appointed for Stella. Stella and Helen, as mentioned, lived in the same house, and John and Edward wanted to displace Helen as Stella's de facto caretaker. Stella died before the application could be heard.

Following Stella's death, Tully represented John and Edward in their capacity as heirs. Tully prepared an application requesting the appointment of a temporary administrator of CT Page 4791 Stella's estate. This application was signed by John and filed in the Bristol Probate Court on October 29, 1991. On November 1, 1991, John filed an application requesting that letters of administration be granted to him as fiduciary. His application names Tully as his attorney. Tully never filed a formal appearance.

Attorney Alfred F. Morrocco, Jr. ("Morrocco") was retained by Helen's children to represent Helen shortly after Stella's death. Helen had herself collapsed the day after her mother's death and was hospitalized in a coma. On October 31, 1991, the Probate Court appointed Attorney James Donovan as her guardian ad litem. Shortly afterwards, Helen's three children retained Morrocco to represent Helen. They gave him a retainer of $2,000. The terms of Morrocco's representation were not made clear. There was no written retainer agreement. Morrocco, at least initially, represented Helen in two different endeavors. The first endeavor was to have Attorney Donovan removed as her guardian ad litem. This task was successfully completed on November 21, 1991, after Helen had been released from the hospital, when Attorney Donovan resigned his position. The second endeavor was the representation of Helen in her capacity as heir to the estate. On November 8, 1991, Morrocco filed an appearance for Helen in the Probate Court in the probate case involving Stella's estate.

John's application for letters of administration was heard by the Probate Court on November 13, 1991. The hearing was attended by Morrocco, Tully, John, Edward, and at least one member of Helen's family. Helen, who was still in poor health, was not present. Morrocco suggested that he and Tully be appointed co-administrators. Those present agreed, and the Probate Court agreed as well. Morrocco and Tully were appointed as co-administrators on November 20, 1991.

Morrocco and Tully now claim compensation for their work as co-administrators and as attorneys for the estate. The period for which they claim compensation begins on November 13 1991, when the Probate Court orally indicated that it would appoint them as co-administrators. It ends on September 9, 1993, when they filed their second final accounting. The Probate Court's ruling on this latter document is the ruling appealed from here. (Morrocco and Tully do not claim fees for any service performed after September 9, 1993.) In this document, Morrocco and Tully each claim $7,500 in administrator's fees and $6,000 in attorney's fees, for a total of $13,500 each and a grand total of $27,000. At trial, CT Page 4792 Morrocco still claimed $13,500. Tully, however, increased his claim to $17,000. Together the two attorneys thus now claim fees of $30,500. These fees are grossly excessive.

The attorneys justify their claim by their hours. Tully claims to have spent 168 billable hours on the case, at rates of $100 to $125 an hour. Morrocco, a more experienced attorney, claims to have spent 143 billable hours on the case, at the rate of $150 an hour. (On its face, this calculus would justify a fee of over $21,000, but Morrocco, as mentioned, limits his claim to $13,500.) Together Morrocco and Tully thus claim to have devoted 311 billable hours to this case. Andrews v. Gorby, supra, makes it clear that "the burden rests on the attorney[s] to prove the reasonableness of the compensation requested by a preponderance of the evidence." 237 Conn. at 23. (Footnote omitted.) Morrocco and Tully have not satisfied this burden of proof. Their claims are undermined by several different factual and legal problems.

First. The evidence makes it unclear which hats Morrocco and Tully were wearing when they billed the hours in question. The problem is that they were for a substantial period of time both co-administrators and attorneys for the heirs.

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Related

Hayward v. Plant
119 A. 341 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1923)
Andrews v. Gorby
675 A.2d 449 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrocco-v-toretto-no-534769-jun-24-1996-connsuperct-1996.