Petrulis v. Wilks

141 Cal. App. 4th 1074
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 31, 2006
DocketNo. B182444
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 141 Cal. App. 4th 1074 (Petrulis v. Wilks) 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
Petrulis v. Wilks, 141 Cal. App. 4th 1074 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

MALLANO, J.

Under the Probate Code, an attorney for the administrator of an estate may be paid for extraordinary services under a “contingency fee” agreement if the trial court approves the agreement after a noticed hearing. (Prob. Code, § 10811, subd. (c).) The trial court may dispense with notice for “good cause.” {Id., § 1220, subd. (c).)

In this case, the trial court approved an agreement entitling counsel to attorney fees based on hourly rates and the total number of hours worked. The trial court dispensed with notice of the hearing and sealed a portion of the record so that creditors of the estate would not learn about the fee [1078]*1078agreement until after they had concluded settlement negotiations with the estate.

Counsel managed to resolve most of the creditors’ claims through settlement, reducing about $12 million in original claims to $1.7 million in court-approved settlements. Counsel also obtained about $700,000 in payments, resulting in an estate with a negative net worth of $1 million. Pursuant to the approved agreement, the administrator petitioned the trial court for approximately $1.25 million in attorney fees.

Upon learning of the fee petition, a creditor objected to the agreement on the ground that it left nothing for creditors. The trial court decided not to award fees pursuant to the agreement and instead awarded $200,000.

The administrator appeals the trial court’s order, arguing that counsel was entitled to an award under the agreement. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion because the agreement was not a “contingency fee” agreement within the meaning of the Probate Code, and the trial court erred in dispensing with notice of the hearing. Further, the fee award was just and reasonable under the circumstances. We therefore affirm.

I

BACKGROUND

On August 17, 2001, Dan Stevenson killed himself. On January 2, 2002, appellant Kenneth Petrulis was appointed administrator with will annexed. Letters of administration issued two days later. Petrulis, an attorney, chose the firm of Goodson & Wachtel (Goodson), where he worked, to represent the estate. The trial court approved a stipulation providing that Petrulis would not share in Goodson’s attorney fees, and Goodson would not share in Petrulis’s commissions.

In the first half of 2002, Petrulis served notice of the proceedings on creditors. Numerous claims, totaling more than $12 million, were filed. Several creditors requested special notice of the proceedings. (See Prob. Code, § 1250; all further statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise indicated.)

On March 15, 2002, Petrulis filed a petition to establish the estate’s ownership of property. The petition alleged that Stevenson had been insolvent for the last 20 years of his life; he had borrowed funds from several creditors [1079]*1079(lenders), often using the funds from one lender to repay funds borrowed from another lender. Stevenson had purchased one or more life insurance policies naming some of the lenders as beneficiaries, who had received policy proceeds after his death. The payment of those proceeds, according to the petition, had the effect of defrauding other creditors. Petrulis sought to recover the insurance proceeds as well as double damages (see § 859). The petition was served on the lenders.

In April and May 2002, several lenders filed objections to the petition. In June 2002, Petrulis filed a reply to the objections, explaining that the lenders had charged usurious interest on the loans, and some of the lenders had defrauded other creditors through the receipt of life insurance proceeds. Petrulis argued that the lenders, collectively, constituted a single joint venture or partnership.

In subsequent amended petitions, filed in September 2002 and February 2003, Petrulis alleged that the lenders had charged usurious rates and defrauded other creditors by accepting assignments of the life insurance proceeds. He sought to (1) recover usury penalties and specified interest payments, (2) reduce the balance of the loans by the amount of interest paid, and (3) recover property fraudulently transferred to other creditors.

On August 26, 2002, Petrulis filed an ex parte petition, seeking the trial court’s approval of three agreements related to Goodson’s compensation as counsel for the estate. The petition recited that the estate had no assets to inventory; the estate’s primary asset was a claim against the lenders for the recovery of insurance proceeds and a potential recovery of usurious interest; the estate also had a claim against Prudential Insurance Company of America (Prudential) for wrongfully paying proceeds to certain lenders under two life insurance policies and wrongfully withholding proceeds from the estate under a third policy; the lenders’ claims against the estate exceeded $12 million; and the estate was without resources to defend itself against the lenders and to pursue its own claims.

Petrulis requested that the trial court dispense with notice of the petition to the lenders, other creditors, and Prudential on the ground that knowledge of the “details and structure” of the agreements would put the estate “at a disadvantage in the litigation.” Petrulis also sought to dispense with notice for the sake of expediency in light of an impending trial date in one matter. The petition stated that “[t]he creation of a pool of assets for the Estate will permit those creditors who are owed money to receive some or all of the amounts owed.”

[1080]*1080In one of the proposed agreements, Barbara Stevenson, the decedent’s surviving spouse, sole beneficiary, and trustee of the Stevenson Family Trust, agreed to loan the estate $50,000 for litigation costs, with the remaining costs to be advanced by Goodson. In another agreement, the estate agreed that Goodson would be paid on a contingency fee basis in bringing suit against Prudential; Goodson was entitled to 33 1/3 percent of any recovery obtained before a trial became probable, 40 percent thereafter.

The third proposed agreement, the “Lodestar Fee Agreement,” stated that Goodson would be paid its normal hourly rates “multiplied by a . . . factor of . . . two hundred percent” for work on claims involving the lenders, plus reimbursement of costs. The multiplier was said to be appropriate given the “contingent nature of the payment of said fees and the deferral of the payment of said fees, if at all.” The Lodestar Fee Agreement further provided: “If the assets of the Estate after payment of all other statutory attorney fees and costs, representative’s commissions and any other administrative costs (‘Net Assets’) are not adequate to pay the Attorney’s Fees in full, [Goodson] agrees to reduce its Attorney’s Fees to an amount equal to the greater of (1) the Net Assets available in the Estate which are payable to and are paid to [Goodson]; or (2) [Goodson’s] normal hourly rates without a [multiplier].” And if the “Net Assets” were not adequate to pay Goodson using its normal hourly rates, Barbara was personally obligated to make up the difference, not to exceed $250,000. Goodson was to have a lien on the estate’s claims and any recovery.

On September 3, 2002, after a hearing attended by Petrulis and an attorney representing Barbara, the trial court, Commissioner H.

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Related

Estate of Stevenson
46 Cal. Rptr. 3d 573 (California Court of Appeal, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
141 Cal. App. 4th 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrulis-v-wilks-calctapp-2006.