ROSALYN BRONSTEIN and ELLA BRONSTEIN v. ESTATE OF KATHERINE S. BRONSTEIN

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 22, 2021
Docket20-2661
StatusPublished

This text of ROSALYN BRONSTEIN and ELLA BRONSTEIN v. ESTATE OF KATHERINE S. BRONSTEIN (ROSALYN BRONSTEIN and ELLA BRONSTEIN v. ESTATE OF KATHERINE S. BRONSTEIN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ROSALYN BRONSTEIN and ELLA BRONSTEIN v. ESTATE OF KATHERINE S. BRONSTEIN, (Fla. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

ROSALYN BRONSTEIN and ELLA BRONSTEIN, Appellants,

v.

BRUCE BRONSTEIN, as the Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF KATHERINE S. BRONSTEIN, Appellee.

No. 4D20-2661

[December 22, 2021]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; Dina Keever-Agrama, Judge; L.T. Case No. 50-2013-CP- 001807-XXXX-NB.

John P. Morrissey of John P. Morrissey, P.A., West Palm Beach, and Robert B. Scarlett of Scarlett & Croll, P.A., Baltimore, Maryland, for appellants.

Anya Van Veen, Brett C. Barner and Robb W. Armstrong of Barner & Barner, P.A., Palm Beach Gardens, for appellee.

WARNER, J.

In proceedings regarding the final distributions from a trust, the probate court directed that appellate attorney’s fees incurred by the trustee in a failed appeal could be paid by the trust, and attorney’s fees incurred in litigating the objections to accountings and the trustee’s compensation could also be paid by the trust. Two trust beneficiaries appeal. We reverse in part, concluding that the appeal for which the fees were incurred provided no benefit to the trust and the trustee, who was also a beneficiary of the trust, was acting solely for his own benefit.

In April 2013, the decedent Katherine Bronstein passed away leaving behind her children Bruce, Rosalyn, and Ella. In existence at the time of her death was the Katherine S. Bronstein Revocable Trust which became irrevocable upon her death. The trust instrument appointed Bruce to serve as successor trustee upon the decedent’s death, and named Bruce and his sisters as beneficiaries. The trust divided the decedent’s assets between her children in the following proportions: Bruce (40%), Ella (30%), and Rosalyn (30%).

The sisters filed multiple actions, petitions, and motions against Bruce in various capacities. In November 2014, the parties entered into a settlement agreement and mutual release resolving all pending disputes between the siblings. The agreement covered all the current litigation between the parties, but the agreement expressly did not release Bruce as trustee from his obligations involved in closing the estate and trust, including providing accountings and distribution of monies and assets of the estate and trust. The agreement contained an attorney’s fee provision which provided that the prevailing party to “[a]ny action arising out of or under this Settlement Agreement and Mutual Release” “shall be entitled to an award of all costs and expenses in such action including but not limited to court costs, discovery costs, expert witness fees and reasonable attorneys’ fees for all levels including appellate.” The parties executed the various releases contemplated by the settlement agreement.

In December 2014, Bruce distributed about 90% of the assets in the trust, and in 2015, he served three accountings on the sisters. The sisters then moved to appoint an independent accounting auditor for the estate and the trust. They alleged Bruce’s accountings were inaccurate or incomplete. Additionally, the sisters alleged that certain expenses could not be verified. After a hearing on the various motions, the trial court denied relief. Bruce moved for attorney’s fees, both pursuant to the settlement agreement and pursuant to section 736.1005(1), Florida Statutes (2019), which authorizes the probate court to award fees to an attorney who has rendered services to the trust. Bruce requested that the fees be assessed against the sisters’ shares pursuant to section 736.1005(2)(a). The trial court entered an order determining the amount of fees and assessed the fees equally against each party’s respective shares of the trust. It did not award prevailing party fees.

Bruce appealed the order contending that pursuant to the settlement agreement he was the prevailing party, and all of the fees should be assessed against the sisters. The sisters argued that the litigation regarding the audit was not covered by the settlement agreement, because it expressly exempted from its terms the obligations of Bruce as trustee in closing the estate and trust and providing accountings. This court affirmed without opinion. See Bronstein v. Bronstein, 227 So. 3d 589 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017) (unpublished table decision).

2 Bruce filed a motion for appellate attorney’s fees, requesting fees pursuant to the settlement agreement and pursuant to section 736.1005. This court denied the motion for attorney’s fees.

Following the appeal, Bruce served the sisters with two more accountings of the trust for 2016 and 2017. The 2017 accounting included the attorney’s fees incurred for Bruce’s appeal of the attorney’s fees award in the prior proceeding which Bruce sought to charge to the trust. The sisters objected to both accountings. In 2019, the sisters filed a motion to compel an accounting of the trust for the period from 2017 to 2019. Bruce then filed a final accounting for all the years and requested court approval for the trustee’s accounts and final distribution. The sisters filed objections, particularly to the payment from the trust of the appellate attorney’s fees from the 2016 failed appeal.

Ultimately, the issues regarding the accountings and objections to the appellate attorney’s fees were tried before the probate court. The trial covered both the attorney’s fees as well as other issues of alleged mismanagement by Bruce as trustee. The trial court entered a detailed final judgment which granted Bruce’s petition for approval of the final accounting and distribution. In the final judgment, the court denied the sister’s objections to the appellate attorney’s fees and the fees incurred in litigating the petition for final accounting and distribution.

As to the appellate attorney’s fees, the court reviewed the “math” of what would have occurred had Bruce won the appeal, noting that “at the end of the day he would have benefitted,” and the sisters’ trust shares would have decreased as a result. Nevertheless, the court explained the “prevailing party” provision of the settlement agreement was meant to lessen the litigation between the sisters and Bruce to preserve the assets of the trust for all beneficiaries.

So, while Bruce’s pursuit of the appeal indeed would have ultimately benefitted him financially had he prevailed, it also was an appeal pursued in good faith in order to enforce the “prevailing party” provision and its intended purpose; i.e., to quell trust expense associated with litigiousness, which ultimately benefits the trust.

Thus, the court allowed the fees and costs associated with the appeal to remain charged against trust assets. The sisters then filed this appeal.

The sisters make two arguments on appeal. First, they contend this court’s order denying fees pursuant to Bruce’s motion for appellate

3 attorney’s fees was res judicata of the issue, and the court erred in allowing fees to be paid out of the trust assets. Second, they argue that the court abused its discretion in determining that the appeal, and thus the fees, was for the benefit of the trust. While res judicata does not apply, we conclude that the court abused its discretion in determining that the fees were incurred to benefit the trust.

As we review the order in the underlying proceeding to the appeal as well as the original appeal itself, it is apparent that the trial court did not award prevailing party fees pursuant to the settlement agreement in the case but awarded the fees to be assessed equally against each share of the trust pursuant to section 736.1005. On appeal, Bruce argued that the settlement agreement’s prevailing party provision applied.

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Bluebook (online)
ROSALYN BRONSTEIN and ELLA BRONSTEIN v. ESTATE OF KATHERINE S. BRONSTEIN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosalyn-bronstein-and-ella-bronstein-v-estate-of-katherine-s-bronstein-fladistctapp-2021.