Sheila Owens-Collins v. Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Gus Tamborello, Substituted Attorney for Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Hattie Shannon, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Melbourne Berlinger, Guardian Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, and Geoffrey Sansom, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 2020
Docket01-19-00520-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sheila Owens-Collins v. Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Gus Tamborello, Substituted Attorney for Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Hattie Shannon, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Melbourne Berlinger, Guardian Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, and Geoffrey Sansom, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated (Sheila Owens-Collins v. Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Gus Tamborello, Substituted Attorney for Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Hattie Shannon, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Melbourne Berlinger, Guardian Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, and Geoffrey Sansom, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheila Owens-Collins v. Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Gus Tamborello, Substituted Attorney for Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Hattie Shannon, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Melbourne Berlinger, Guardian Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, and Geoffrey Sansom, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 3, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00520-CV ——————————— SHEILA OWENS-COLLINS, Appellant V. DANA DREXLER, TEMPORARY GUARDIAN OF THE PERSON AND ESTATE OF HATTIE B. OWENS, INCAPACITATED, GUS TAMBORELLO, SUBSTITUTED ATTORNEY FOR DANA DREXLER, TEMPORARY GUARDIAN OF THE PERSON AND ESTATE OF HATTIE B. OWENS, INCAPACITATED, HATTIE SHANNON, ATTORNEY AD LITEM OF THE ESTATE OF HATTIE B. OWENS, INCAPACITATED, MELBOURNE BERLINGER, GUARDIAN AD LITEM OF THE ESTATE OF HATTIE B. OWENS, INCAPACITATED, AND GEOFFREY SANSOM, ATTORNEY AD LITEM OF THE ESTATE OF HATTIE B. OWENS, INCAPACITATED, Appellees

On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 2 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 461,718 MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from a guardianship proceeding. The proposed ward—Hattie

Owens—died during the pendency of the proceeding. The probate court awarded

fees and expenses to an attorney ad litem, guardian ad litem, and temporary guardian.

Owens’s daughter, Sheila Owens-Collins, appeals challenging these awards as well

as the probate court’s order approving the temporary guardian’s final account.

We affirm the probate court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Owens was 89 years of age when the events immediately underlying this

guardianship proceeding unfolded. For a number of years, Owens had resided alone

in Houston. During this time, Owens’s daughter, Collins, managed her financial and

medical affairs as her agent under a statutory durable power of attorney and medical

power of attorney that Owens executed in 2011. After Hurricane Harvey damaged

Owens’s home in late August 2017, Owens temporarily moved in with her

granddaughter, Aisha Ross. Owens later moved into an assisted living center for the

elderly staffed by caregivers around the clock, which is where she resided during the

pendency of this proceeding.

Ross and Collins became embroiled in disputes over the management of

Owens’s finances and medical care. Ross accused Collins of misappropriating assets

from Owens and neglecting her medical care. In the course of these disputes, Owens

2 executed new, conflicting powers of attorney. In September 2017, Owens executed

a durable power of attorney and a medical power of attorney, which named both

Collins and Ross as agents. Two days later, Owens executed another statutory

durable power of attorney and medical power of attorney that named Collins as her

sole agent. Collins alleged that Ross had manipulated Owens into signing the first

set of powers of attorney that Owens executed in 2017.

Ross applied for the appointment of a permanent guardian of Owens’s person

and estate in October 2017. Ross alleged that Owens had dementia and was totally

incapacitated. Citing the conflicting powers of attorney, Ross also applied for the

appointment of a temporary guardian. Collins opposed the appointment of a

temporary or permanent guardian.

At various points in the proceeding, several other interested relatives appeared

through counsel or otherwise. These include:

• Owens’s two sons, Emiel and Melvin Owens;

• Owens’s other daughter, Angela Owens-Sapp;

• Owens’s grandson, Roy Collins IV; and

• Owens’s nephew, Donald Owens.

For a time, Owens was also represented by her own counsel.

The probate court appointed Hattie Shannon as attorney ad litem in October

2017. It also appointed an investigator to meet Owens, consult her physicians, and

3 review records as to her health and finances. In December 2017, the investigator

filed a report stating that Owens opposed the appointment of a guardian. But the

investigator’s report also noted that Adult Protective Services found that Collins had

financially exploited Owens. Though the investigator reported that Owens was alert

and appeared healthy, the investigator recommended that Owens undergo an

independent medical examination to ascertain her capacity.

Previous exams had yielded conflicting results. After one exam performed in

November 2017, Dr. Mitchell Alan Young concluded that Owens was not

incapacitated. Based on another exam performed in November 2017, Dr. Kamayani

Khare concluded that Owens was totally incapacitated. In an addendum, Dr. Khare

noted that on the day of the exam she had an unexpected telephone conversation

with Collins in which Collins acknowledged that Owens had mild dementia but

nonetheless believed Owens to be competent and wanted to verify that Khare

thought so too. Khare disagreed with Collins and told Collins so.

Collins opposed subjecting Owens to an independent medical examination.

After a December 2017 hearing on the issue, the probate court ordered Owens to

undergo an exam. The probate court did not make specific findings of fact, but its

ruling appears to have been based on three undisputed facts: (1) that Adult Protective

Services found Collins had financially exploited Owens; (2) that Owens did not

know about significant payments that Collins had made from Owens’s bank account;

4 and (3) that medical evidence indicated Owens possibly had memory problems. At

or after the hearing, the probate court appointed Dana Drexler as temporary guardian

of the person and estate of Owens.

In January 2018, Dr. Ali Abbas Asghar-Ali conducted an independent medical

exam. He concluded that Owens had a history of stroke of mild severity and a major

neurocognitive disorder of moderate severity. He further concluded:

• Owens had deficits in short-term memory, immediate recall, problem- solving, and ability to grasp abstract aspects of her situation;

• Owens was unable to make complex financial decisions, manage a bank account, operate an automobile, make decisions as to marriage, administer her own medications on a daily basis, engage in activities like cooking and cleaning, or make treatment decisions concerning her own healthcare;

• Owens physical and mental functioning would not improve; and

• it was in Owens’s best interest to take medication for the care and treatment of dementia but she lacked the capacity required to give informed consent to the administration of this medication.

Overall, Asghar-Ali concluded that Owens was partially incapacitated—unable to

perform some of the tasks required to care for herself or to manage her property—

within the meaning of the Estates Code. Owens thus required a guardian to manage

her finances, healthcare, and instrumental activities of daily life, like cleaning,

cooking, shopping, and travel. Due to her partial incapacity, Asghar-Ali further

concluded that Owens would not be able to understand and participate in a court

hearing and should not appear at one.

5 Dr. Chris Merkl, a treating physician, performed an additional exam in April

2018. He concluded Owens was totally incapacitated.

Based on the exams made by Drs. Asghar-Ali, Khare, and Merkl, Drexler

moved for appointment of a disinterested third-party as permanent guardian for

Owens in September 2018. By this point, all family members other than Collins

agreed that a disinterested third-party guardian should be appointed for Owens.

Melbourne Berlinger, whom the probate court had appointed as guardian ad litem,

also agreed that a disinterested third-party should be appointed as permanent

guardian during a hearing that same month. Berlinger later formally moved to

appoint a third-party guardian based on Owens’s incapacity and familial discord.

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Sheila Owens-Collins v. Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Gus Tamborello, Substituted Attorney for Dana Drexler, Temporary Guardian the Person and Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Hattie Shannon, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Melbourne Berlinger, Guardian Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, and Geoffrey Sansom, Attorney Ad Litem of the Estate of Hattie B. Owens, Incapacitated, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheila-owens-collins-v-dana-drexler-temporary-guardian-the-person-and-texapp-2020.